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Mīr-Khvānd Mir-Khwānd (Mohammad ibn Khwāndshāh ibn Mahmud, written also as Mīr-Khwānd, Mirkhond, and other variants; 1433/1434–1498) was a noted Persian-language historian of the fifteenth century. He is known in Latin and Greek as Mirchond. ==Life== Born in 1433 in Bukhara, present-day Uzbekistan, the son of a pious man belonging to an old Bukhāran family of sādah or direct descendants of Muhammad, Mir-Khwānd grew up and died in Balkh. From his early youth he applied himself to historical studies and literature in general.〔Henry Miers Elliot, ''The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians: The Muhammadan Period'', ed. John Dowson (London: Trübner and Co., 1872), 127-129; (OCLC 3425271 ), available in full text from (Google Books ).〕 In Herat, Afghanistan, where Mir-Khwānd spent the greater part of his life, he gained the favor of a famous patron of letters, Ali-Shir Nava'i (1440–1501), who served his old schoolfellow, the reigning Sultan Husayn Mirza Bayqara (''r''. 1469–1506), the last Tīmūrid ruler in Iran, first as keeper of the seal, afterwards as governor of Jurjan. At the request of Mir ʿAli-Shir, himself a distinguished statesman and writer, Mir-Khwānd began about 1474, in the quiet khanqah of Khilashyah, which his patron had founded in Herat as a house of retreat for literary men of merit, his great work on universal history, the ''Rawżat aṣ-ṣafāʾ'' ((アラビア語:روضة الصفا) "Garden of Purity").
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