Abd al-Rahim Biy

Abd al-Rahim Biy (c. 1697-1733) - the second ruler from the Uzbek[1] dynasty of Ming in the Kokand Khanate.

Abd al-Rahim Biy was the eldest son of Shahrukh Bek, who ascended the throne after the death of his father.

Abd al-Rahim-biy was the first of the Uzbek rulers of the Ming clan to be called sahibqiran by historians, imitating Amir Timur.

[2] Then Abd al-Rahim Biy tried to subjugate Samarkand and entered into an alliance with the rulers of Shakhrisabz from the Uzbek family of Kenagas.

In 1733, as a result of a conspiracy, he was killed, and power in the state passed to his brother Abd al-Karim Biy, who came under the influence of the Ashtarkhanids from Bukhara.