ERETNA DYNASTY


Meaning of ERETNA DYNASTY in English

dynasty that succeeded the Mongol Il-Khanid rulers in central Anatolia and ruled there from c. 1343 to 1380. The dynasty's founder, Eretna, was an officer of Uighur (Uyghur) origin in the service of Demirtas, the Il-Khanid governor of Anatolia, who revolted (1326) against the Il-Khanid ruler Abu Sa'id and escaped to Egypt. Eretna then became governor of Anatolia under the suzerainty of Hasan the Elder, ruler of Azerbaijan. After Hasan the Elder was defeated by Hasan the Younger, son of Demirtas, Eretna in 1337 received the protection of the Mamluk sultan of Egypt. In 1343, however, Eretna defeated Hasan the Younger and emerged as an independent ruler over territories that included Nigde, Ankara, Amasya, Tokat, Samsun, and Erzincan; he made Sivas and later Kayseri his capital. Eretna was a scholarly man and a just ruler, whose people called him Kse Peygamber (Prophet with the Scanty Beard). Under Eretna's successors, local rulers rebelled; the principality lost territories in the west to the Ottomans and the Karamans and in the east to the Turkmen Ak Koyunlu state. In 1380 Mehmed II, the last Eretna ruler, was killed, and Burhaneddin, a former vizier, proclaimed himself sultan over Eretna lands.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.