Subhan Quli Khan (Chagatai and Persian: سبحان قلی خان; 1625–1702) was the sixth ruler of the Bukhara Khanate, who reigned from 1681 to 1702.
On 2 February 1681, a khutba with the name of the new ruler Subhan Quli Khan was read in the mosques of Bukhara.
[1] The economic situation in the country continued to deteriorate, internal political contradictions intensified every year, and Subhan Quli Khan had great difficulty coping with them.
The separatism of the subjects of the Uzbek tribes greatly increased towards the end of the reign of Subhan Quli Khan.
[3] The thinker Ahmad Donish (1827-1897) proposed dividing the history of Central Asia into eras on the basis of the rule of the most prominent rulers, the so-called renovators of the century, among whom he included Subhan Quli Khan.