Malik sha Seljuk sultan

 

 Before Malik Shah's increase, the seat had stayed empty for
a very long time following the demise of Kilij Arslan I in 1107. Malik Shah was held detainee in Isfahan until 1110 when he got back to Anatolia to expect the seat. Instantly before his passing he was crushed by the Byzantine ruler Alexios Komnenos at the Battle of Philomelion. Malik Shah then, at that point marked a deal with the sovereign, supposedly consenting to allow the Byzantines to reclaim all their territory in Anatolia, yet the arrangement was invalidated get-togethers Shah was dismissed, dazed and in the long run killed by his sibling Mesud, who succeeded him as king. The deficiency of renown endured by Malik Shah because of his loss by the Byzantines likely hastened his fall.[2][3] 


Malik Shah was portrayed by Anna Komnena as a disregarded the imbecile methodologies of his more experienced officers, to where he taunted and condemned his commanders. 


Malik Shah, the Seljuk Sultan of Rûm should not to be mistaken for his better known namesake and far off cousin, Malik-Shah I of the Great Seljuq Empire.

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