What is the personality type of El Temur? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for El Temur from Empress Ki and what is the personality traits.
El Temur personality type is ENTJ, although this is not always the case.
As Long as There Is Life, There Is Hope
The goal of life is to be happy. However, it is not always easy for people to realize their potential and express it. The primary reason for this is that they are often not aware of what they can do or who they are—it is therefore important to use the Enneagram to discover what lies behind the many masks they wear.
The enneagram's eight types are marked by the number of enneagram points they have. People who have one or two points are called enneatypes. For example, the enneatype 1 (I) is marked by 1 point. The enneatype 8 (O) has 8 points.
The Enneagram Points
1: The Protean point has a purpose but is unable to stay in one place. It is constantly switching between being in one place or another. 2: The Nomad point wanders from place to place in search of a purpose. 3: The Wandering point wanders in search of a purpose.
El Temür was a Kipchak officer who was behind the coup d'état that installed Tugh Temür as the Yuan emperor in the capital Khanbaliq in 1328. The restorationists at Khanbaliq won the War of the Two Capitals under the leadership of Tugh Temür and El Temür. After the surrender of Shangdu, Tugh Temür abdicated in favour of his brother Kusala who was backed by Chagatai Khan Eljigidey and announced Khanbaliq's intent to welcome him. However, Kusala suddenly died only four days after a banquet with Tugh Temür, supposedly killed with poison by El Temür, who purged pro-Kusala officials and brought power to warlords, whose despotic rule marked the decline of the Yuan dynasty. His daughter, Danashiri married Toghon Temür and bore him a son but he died when he was a child. El Temür also had a son, Tangqishi, who was also an officer. El Temür became ill and died in 1333 and his children were subsequently murdered by former co-conspirator Bayan in 1335.