Yalangtoʻsh Bakhodir

[14] The name "Yalantosh Bohodur" is engraved in the modern Uzbek language on the stone tablet placed next to his grave.

All legal documents drawn up on his behalf, including the inscription on one of the madrassas on Registan Square, are written in Persian.

His father and his son were students of Khoja Hashim Dahbetii,[5][18] a descendant of the famous Naqshbandi Sufi leader Mahdumi Azam (1461-1542).

Yalangtoshbi and his daughters: Iqlima bonu, Ayibibi were buried in the cemetery in Dahbet, under the feet of Khoja Hashim Dahbeti.

All legal documents drawn up in his name, as well as an inscription in one of the madrasas on Registan Square, are written in Persian-Tajik.

Yalangtosh was Bahadur's own army, and as a result of his raids on the surrounding districts, he collected a lot of material resources.

In 1642, when Imam Quli Khan became blind, Yalangtosh Bahadir and other emirs brought Nadr Muhammad from Balkh and put him on the throne.

Nadr Muhammed Yalangtosh gave Darai Suf region, Molgan, Kahmerd and the Tulchichi, Saiganchi, Zirangi, Kilachi, Hazaranikudari tribes around Kabul with their herbs in the form of iqta.

[23] In 1628, on the orders of Imam Quli Khan, Kazakh Abuli killed Sultan in Tashkent and forced him to flee to Kashgar.

[24] In 1636, the army of Imamkuli Khan, led by Yalangtosh, marched to Sayram and attacked the surrounding Kazakh tribes.

[25] In 1640, the army led by Yalangtosh destroyed the Dzungars who invaded the lands of Kazakhs and nomadic Uzbeks.

Barefoot Bahadir comes from Samarkand with a well-armed military unit of 30,000 men to collect taxes from the Kazakhs.

Both the Khanate of Bukhara and the Great Mongol Empire claimed the important cities of Khurasan and Balkh.

Later, Yalangtosh made many successful campaigns, captured and plundered Mashhad, and brought many captive masters from there.

Abu Tahirhojanit wrote in "Samarija" that "Naked Bahadur's grave is in Dahbed near Samarkand, under the feet of Makhdumi Azam, on the couch, inside the tomb wall."

With the help of Yalangtosh Bahadir, the Sherdar madrasa was built in the heart of Samarkand on Registan Square, and eventually this building became a historical and cultural monument.

[26] One of the inscriptions written in Persian-Tajik on the wall of the Sherdar madrasa says that "the commander-in-chief, righteous Yalangtosh Bahadir" was its founder.

Tombstone of the Naked Bahadur in Dahbet