Jumghur (Persian: جومقور) was the second son of Hulagu. Although according to some researchers, he may have been the eldest one.[1][2]
^Broadbridge, Anne F. (2016). "Marriage, Family and Politics: The Ilkhanid-Oirat Connection". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. 26 (1–2): 121–135. doi:10.1017/S1356186315000681. ISSN 1356-1863.
^"Mediating Sacred Kingship: Conversion and Sovereignty in Mongol Iran". deepblue.lib.umich.edu. Retrieved 2020-04-15.
Jumghur (Persian: جومقور) was the second son of Hulagu. Although according to some researchers, he may have been the eldest one. He was born to Hulagu...
Shadai Güregen (great-grandson of Chilaun) and Orghudaq Khatun (daughter of Jumghur) Eirene Palaiologina, daughter of Andronikos II (married in 1302) Khutulun...
daughter of Toralchi Güregen of the Oirat tribe and Checheikhen Khatun Jumghur (died en route to Iran in 1270s) Bulughan agha – married Jorma Güregen...
Khatun, daughter of Kingshu or Orghutaq (in both cases, a granddaughter of Jumghur, a son of Hulagu) Tödai Khatun (m. 6 April 1284), widow of Abaqa Khan;...
appointments came after coronation, as was custom - His cousins Jushkab (son of Jumghur) and Baydu were assigned to viceroyalty of Baghdad, Buqa's brother Aruq...
Muzaffar al-Din Hajjaj in 1263/4 A daughter — married to Kingshü, son of Jumghur Menglitegin — married to Amir Tasu of Eljigin clan of Khongirad Bulughan...
then Ara Qutlugh, daughter of Möngke Temür Tolun Khatun — married to Jumghur before 1270s, then Tekshin (until 12 September 1271), both sons of Hulagu...
position, he appointed his brother Aruq as governor of Baghdad (while Jumghur's son Prince Jushkab was practically his puppet) and his follower Imad ud-Din...