Pulat Khan

Iskhak Khasan-uulu (Uzbek: Ishak Hasan o'g'li), better known as Pulat Khan (Uzbek: Po'lat Xon), was briefly the Khan of Kokand and one of the leaders of the Kokand rebellion that took place from 1873 to 1876.

He was born as Iskhak Hasn-ulu to a Kirgiz tribe in Kishtak Okhna, Margilan in about 1844.

[1] Dissatisfied with Khudayar Khan's policies, he sent a delegation to speak to Pulat Bey, the grandson of Alim Khan, who lived in a Samarkand madrasa, to convince him to start an uprising against Khudayar.

The delegation, having failed, instead, convinced Iskhak to impersonate the actual Pulat Bey and simply to lead the uprising himself, in which he would declare himself Khan.

After assembling an army, Iskhak's army managed to takeover Kokand from Nasruddin Khan, who was proclaimed Khan after Khudayar fled to Tashkent after an uprising on 22 July 1875.