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Sultan Satuq Bughra Khan : ウィキペディア英語版 | Sultan Satuq Bughra Khan Hazrat Sultan Satuq Bughra Khan Ghazi (حضرت سلطان ستوق بغرا خان غازي) ((ウイグル語:سۇلتان سۇتۇق بۇغراخان) (also spelled Satuk; died 955〔https://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/200106/kashgar-china.s.western.doorway.htm〕) was a Kara-Khanid Khan; in 934, he was one of the first Turkic rulers to convert to Islam,〔András Róna-Tas, ''Hungarians & Europe in the Early Middle Ages: An Introduction to Early Hungarian'', (Central European University Press, 1999), 256.〕 which prompted his Kara-Khanid subjects to convert.〔Svat Soucek, ''A History of Inner Asia'', (Cambridge University Press, 2002), 84.〕 There are different historical accounts of the Satuq's life with some variations. Sources include ''Mulhaqāt al-Surāh'' (Supplement to the "Surah") by Jamal Qarshi (b. 1230/31) who quoted an earlier 11th-century text ''Tarikh-i Kashghar'' (History of Kashgar) by Abū-al-Futūh 'Abd al-Ghāfir ibn al-Husayn al-Alma'i, an account by Ottoman historian known as the Munajjimbashi, as well as a fragment of a manuscript in Chagatai, ''Tazkirah Bughra Khan'' (Memory of Bughra Khan). ==Origin== Satuq was said to have come from Artush, identified in the 10th century book ''Hudud al-'alam'' (The Limits of the World) as a "populous village of the Yaghma", the Yaghma being one of the Turkish tribes that formed the Karakhanids.〔
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