Question

An architectural style named for this empire pioneered polychromic bannā’i tilework and fluted turquoise onion double domes, starting with the Mausoleum of Khoja Ahmed Yasawi in 1389. For 10 points each:
[10e] Name this empire that built the Bībī Khānum Mosque and the Gōr-i Amīr Mausoleum in Samarkand during its namesake renaissance. This empire’s eponymous founder was a “lame” Turco-Mongol conqueror.
ANSWER: Timurid Empire [or Imparātūrī Tēmūrī or Temürilär Imperiya; accept Timur the Lame or Tamerlane or Timur Lenk or Timur-i Lang or Temür Küregen or Tēmūr Gurkānī; accept Timurid Renaissance]
[10h] Timurid architecture reached its zenith in this city, which became the capital under Shāhrukh and Gawharshād (“go-har-SHAHD”). Alīshēr Nawā’ī is buried in the Musallā complex in this city, whose namesake school patronized miniature painting.
ANSWER: Herat [or Harāt; accept Herat School or Maktab-i Harāt]
[10m] This successor of Shāhrukh oversaw the peak of the Timurid Renaissance in Herāt. This ruler names a madrasa and an observatory that compiled the Zīj-i Sultānī astronomical tables in Samarkand.
ANSWER: Ulugh Bēg [or Mīrzā Muhammad Tāraghay bin Shāhrukh]
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Summary

Data

BinghamtonCornell B100010
Cornell ARIT A1001020
Cornell CRIT B1001020