Akhsitan I
Akhsitan I (also spelled Akhsatan; Persian: اخستان یکم, romanized: Aḵestān) was the 20th Shirvanshah after 1160, and thought to have reigned until the years 1197–1203/04. He was the son and successor of Manuchihr III (r. 1120 – after 1160). His mother was Tamar, a Georgian princess from the Bagrationi dynasty.
Akhsitan I | |
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Shirvanshah al-Maliku'l-Mu'azzam | |
Coin of Akhsitan I, minted at Shamakhi between 1175 and 1194 | |
Shirvanshah | |
Reign | after 1160 – 1197–1203/04 |
Predecessor | Manuchihr III |
Successor | Afridun II (possibly) Shahanshah Farrukhzad I |
Born | c. 1112 |
Died | 1197–1203/04 |
Consort | Safwat al-Din |
Dynasty | Kasranids |
Father | Manuchihr III |
Mother | Tamar |
Religion | Sunni Islam |
The details regarding Akhsitan's reign are uncertain and obscure. He may have ruled the kingdom together with members of his family, Shahanshah, Afridun II and Fariburz II. He is notable for moving his place of residence to Baku, which marked its beginning as a major city. Akhsitan was also notably the patron of both Khaqani and Nizami Ganjavi, two leading Persian poets.
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