Category
page 1People executed by the Mongol Empire
Al-Musta'sim
'''Abu Ahmad Abdallah ibn al-Mustansir bi'llah (), better known by his regnal title Al-Mustaʿṣim bi-llāh''' (; 1213 – 20 February 1258), was the 37th and last caliph from the Abbasid dynasty ruling from Baghdad. He held the title from 1242 until his death in 1258.

Demetrius II of Georgia
King of Georgia (1259-1289)
Mstislav III of Kyiv
Russian prince
Temüge
Temüge () (c. 1168–1246) was the youngest brother of Genghis Khan, fourth son of Yesugei.
Inalchuq
Inalchuq (or Inalchuk) (died 1219) was governor of Otrar in the Khwarezmian Empire in the early 13th century, known mainly for helping to provoke the successful and catastrophic invasion of Khwarezmia by Genghis Khan.
Shams al-Din Juvayni
13th century Persian statesman and vizier for the Mongols
Emperor Mozhu of Western Xia
emperor of the Western Xia Dynasty
Buqa
Buqa (or Bugha) (died January 16, 1289) was a Mongol lord and chancellor who was instrumental in sweeping Arghun to power as the fourth Il-Khan of Iran in 1284 and became his chief minister (vizier) and advisor, succeeding Shams ad-Din Juvayni whom Arghun had executed in October 1284. Buqa too was executed on Arghun's order in January 1289.
Gvantsa Kakhaberidze
13th-century Queen of Georgia
Chinqai
Chinqai (, 1252), also known by his Sinicized name Tian Zhenhai (), was a Mongol statesman, scholar and politician in early Mongol Empire. He was a Nestorian and his ethnic origin was Kereit according to the History of Yuan, Uyghur according to Ata Malik Juvayni's Tarīkh-i Jahān-gushā (History of the World Conqueror), though some also argued that he could be an Öngüd.
Sharaf al-Din Harun Juvayni
Bilarghu
Bilarghu, also '''Pilargh'ou''', was a Mongol general of the ruler Ghazan during the end of the 13th and the beginning of the 14th century.