NÃÂá¹£ir al-Dën Sökmen II (died 1185) was the ShÃÂh-i Arman, the ruler of the Turkoman principality centred on Ahlat, from 1128 until his death. He married ShÃÂhbÃÂnà «, daughter of â²Izz al-Dën Saltuq II, ruler of the Saltukids of Erzurum. He and his wife both engaged in major building projects that brought the ShÃÂh-i Armanid state to its zenith.
In 1164, ShÃÂhbÃÂnà « rebuilt the ruined citadel of Ahlat and the roads leading into the city, replaced the old wooden bridges with new stone ones and constructed large new inns inside the city. She employed an engineer named Qaraqush, who completed the massive construction project in only a few months. None of these works have been survived, all being destroyed after the siege of Ahlat in 1229âÂÂ30, when the Khwarazmshah JalÃÂl al-Dën captured the city.
Sökmen founded a city, SukmÃÂnÃÂbÃÂd, named after himself. It lay west of Khoy on the caravan route between Ahlat and Tabriz. Its ruins have not been found. Sökmen died without heirs, condemning his principality to a period of instability that lasted until 1207.