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词条 Battle of Marv
释义

  1. Background

  2. Battle

  3. References

  4. See also

{{Infobox military conflict
|conflict=Battle of Marv
|partof=the Persian-Uzbek Wars
|image=جنگ مرو.jpg
|image_size=300px|caption=Fresco "Battle of Merv between shah Ismail I and the Uzbek khan Muhammad Shaybani in 1510" in a Chehel Sotoun palace in Isfahan..
|date=2 December 1510[1]
|place=Merv, Khorasan, Turkmenistan
|result= Decisive Safavid victory.[2]
|territory= Safavids regain control of Khorasan.
|combatant1= Safavid Empire
|combatant2=Khanate of Bukhara
|commander1=Shah Ismail I
|commander2=Shaybani Khan {{KIA}}
|strength1=17,000 [3]
|strength2=28,000
|casualties1=Unknown
|casualties2=10,000[4]
}}{{Campaignbox Shaybani}}

The Battle of Merv (or Marv) occurred on 2 December 1510 as a result of the Uzbek invasion of Khorasan. It ended with a decisive victory for the Safavid dynasty. The result was that the Safavids regained control of the Khorasan region. (north-eastern and east of present Iran, southern parts of present-day Turkmenistan, and western and northern Afghanistan).

Background

After the Shaybani Uzbeks began to rise to power in Transoxiana around 1495, Muhammad Shaybani Khan was waiting for a chance to annex the territory of the Timurids in Herat, which eventually occurred when the forces of the Uzbek Khan occupied the city and its environs in 1507. Shah Ismail started his campaign in Azerbaijan in 1502, and had re-unified all of Iran by 1509. Badi al-zaman, Husayn Bayqarah's son and heir, sought asylum at Ismail's court and induced him to launch a campaign in the east.{{citation needed|date=May 2012}}

Battle

Shah Ismail reached Khorasan with great speed; Shaybani Khan retreated to Merv castle to await reinforcement from Uzbek tribes.

The Safavid army then pretended to retreat, encouraging the Uzbeks to leave the castle in pursuit, only to be ambushed and destroyed by the Qizilbash ("Red Heads") troops of Shah Ismail once they were too far from the castle to regain its safety. The Safavid forces were reportedly heavily outnumbered by the army of Shaybani Khan, who was caught and killed trying to escape the battle. Shah Ismail had his body parts sent to various areas of the empire for display, while famously having his skull coated in gold and made into a jeweled drinking goblet.[5] The primary outcomes of the battle renewed Safavid control of Khorasan, the historic region which lies mostly in parts of modern-day Iran, Turkmenistan and Afghanistan.

References

1. ^{{cite encyclopedia |last=SAVORY |first=ROGER| title= ESMĀʿĪL I ṢAFAWĪ | encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica | accessdate=2011-01-23|url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/esmail-i-safawi}}
2. ^Savory, Roger, Iran Under the Safavids, (Cambridge University Press, 1980), 35.
3. ^Ismāʿīl I at Encyclopædia Britannica
4. ^Savory, Roger, Iran Under the Safavids, Cambridge University Press, 2008, {{ISBN|0-521-04251-8}}, page 36.
5. ^{{cite web|url=https://books.google.nl/books?id=g6iQBAAAQBAJ&pg=PT97&dq=battle+of+marv+shaybanids&hl=nl&sa=X&ei=adukVO-4DoKAU6m0gagL&ved=0CCAQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=battle%20of%20marv%20shaybanids&f=false|title=Medieval Persia 1040-1797|accessdate=1 January 2015}}

See also

  • Shi'a-Sunni relations
  • Battle of Ghazdewan
{{coord missing|Turkmenistan}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Marv 1510}}

4 : Conflicts in 1510|Battles involving the Safavid dynasty|1510 in Asia|History of Turkmenistan

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