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@rmi5 What does my sig look like? :what:
Nice avatar you have got kaan:D
However,I miss that old chicky,bird..recalls me of @Akheilos :D
Can anyone tell me that what does akheilos and kaan means?
In Urdu,kaan means mines such as gold mine etc...so kaan is a mine of knowledge and intellectuality?right?:D
 
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Nice avatar you have got kaan:D
However,I miss that old chicky,bird..recalls me of @Akheilos :D
Can anyone tell me that what does akheilos and kaan means?
In Urdu,kaan means mines such as gold mine etc...so kaan is a mine of knowledge and intellectuality?right?:D
People told me kaan means ear.

When I put kaan I was thinking of this:

gty_genghis_khan_kb_130904_16x9_992.jpg
 
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Nice avatar you have got kaan:D
However,I miss that old chicky,bird..recalls me of @Akheilos :D
Can anyone tell me that what does akheilos and kaan means?
In Urdu,kaan means mines such as gold mine etc...so kaan is a mine of knowledge and intellectuality?right?:D
@Kaan is a turkish name, meaning khan or king.
BTW, in addition to minerals, I guess that it has another meaning in your language as well. :lol::lol::lol: specially, if you write it with u instead of aa ;) :rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
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People told me kaan means ear.

When I put kaan I was thinking of this:

gty_genghis_khan_kb_130904_16x9_992.jpg
Yes indeed,.kaan can also be translated into ear.Actually Urdu is complex language, Just like Chinese according to Ahmed Shah patras bukhari.So,kaan has two meanings ear and mine. Note here that ear itself is a mine of wax:D

So, I want chai with Turkish special. What do we.have in menu?:D
 
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Nice avatar you have got kaan:D
However,I miss that old chicky,bird..recalls me of @Akheilos :D
Can anyone tell me that what does akheilos and kaan means?
In Urdu,kaan means mines such as gold mine etc...so kaan is a mine of knowledge and intellectuality?right?:D
Akheilos is the Greek sea monster....Greek mythology ...
 
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He is Shah Abbas the Great. The most famous and powerful Safavid king.

Did Safavid, Afsharid or Qajar leaders used the title Khan ? Ottoman Sultans used it, sometimes Sultan title is not even mentioned, in the source I'm reading right now its goes like Murad Khan, Bayezid Khan, or like Sultan Muhammed Khan.
 
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Did Safavid, Afsharid or Qajar leaders used the title Khan ? Ottoman Sultans used it, sometimes Sultan title is not even mentioned, in the source I'm reading right now its goes like Murad Khan, Bayezid Khan, or like Sultan Muhammed Khan.
khan=khaghan=khaa'aan are the same word which has Mongolian roots. Originally, it is pronounced as khaan in mongolia. This word then transfered to turkic languages, and it meant the chief of a tribe or a king, or the similar titles. but, later khaghan was specified for the king and khan got downgraded to the head of a tribe, or sometimes for princes. During Azeri rulers of Iran, Safavids, Afsharids, and Qajars, khan was used for the head of a tribe, not a king. That's why except for Agha Mohammad Khan, who was the head of Qajar tribe and later became a king, no other Azeri king used this title. Later, during the Qajar emperors, the word khan was used for the heads of tribes, and cities, ... who are sent by Qajars, and the word Kalantar was used for the ones who were elected by people to be the head of the city or the tribe.
 
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khan=khaghan=khaa'aan are the same word which has Mongolian roots. Originally, it is pronounced as khaan in mongolia. This word then transfered to turkic languages, and it meant the chief of a tribe or a king, or the similar titles. but, later khaghan was specified for the king and khan got downgraded to the head of a tribe, or sometimes for princes. During Azeri rulers of Iran, Safavids, Afsharids, and Qajars, khan was used for the head of a tribe, not a king. That's why except for Agha Mohammad Khan, who was the head of Qajar tribe and later became a king, no other Azeri king used this title. Later, during the Qajar emperors, the word khan was used for the heads of tribes, and cities, ... who are sent by Qajars, and the word Kalantar was used for the ones who were elected by people to be the head of the city or the tribe.

My etymologic dictionary doesn't tells anything about Mongolian roots :/

I think Khagan&Khan thingy is not a fact, it may have some symbolic distinction for medieval Genghisids but they were likely interchangeable for most times.

In Anatolia local&regional&tribal leaders were called Bey(Beg originally).
 
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