Mogul Tè-kok

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mogul Tè-kok
Remove ads

Mogul Tè-kok (Urdu-gí: مغلیہ سلطنت‎, Mughliyah Salṭanat), chū hō sī Gūrkāniyān (Pho-su-gí: گورکانیان‎‎), chú-iàu thóng-tī Ìn-tō͘ chhù-tāi-lio̍k, sī chêng Bông-kó͘ Tè-kok ê Chagatai Hān-kok Timurid ông-tiâu tī 1526 nî kiàn-li̍p--ê.

Quick Facts Mughal Empire, Tē-ūi ...
Thumb
18 sè-kí chái-kî ê chi-phòe hoān-ûi.

Tè-kok thóng-tī liáu kin-á-ji̍t Ìn-tō͘ chhù-tāi-lio̍k kap Afghanistan ê tōa-pō͘-hūn.

Remove ads

Hō-miâ

Mogul chit-ê miâ sī keng-kòe A-la-pek kap Pho-su tùi "Bông-kó͘" ê chheng-ho͘ piàn-hêng--chhut-lâi-ê, liáu-āu thoân kòe Se-iûⁿ kok-ka, chit-ê chheng-ho͘ kiông-tiāu liáu Timurid ông-tiâu ê Bông-kó͘ goân-thâu.

Tsù-sik

  1. The title (Mirza) descends to all the sons of the family, without exception. In the royal family it is placed after the name instead of before it, thus, Abbas Mirza and Hosfiein Mirza. Mirza is a civil title, and Khan is a military one. The title of Khan is creative, but not hereditary.[5]

Tsù-kái

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads