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4[[quoteright:300:[[Film/TheJungleBook2016 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/shere_kahn_vine_poster.png]]]]
5[[caption-width-right:300:The name is [[RougeAnglesOfSatin misspelled]] here, but fits nonetheless.]]
6
7There's something about the name "Khan" that just sounds threatening and powerful to people in Western countries. So it follows that in works of fiction, if you want a really good evil name for your villain, and [[NameOfCain Kain]] is out of the question, "Khan" will do just fine. "Kahn" and other alternate spellings are also available.
8
9The reasons for this may stem from historical European perceptions of Turko-Mongol cultures, for whom the word 'Khaan' (pronounced like 'haan' but with a harder, harsher 'h' sound) was the equivalent term for a king or lord. UsefulNotes/GenghisKhan is the one most folks have heard of, but other languages and cultures used "khan" as well. Thus, the name "Khan" for a villain in a work of fiction implies a powerful, dangerous ruler of a people or nation, and possibly one with a historical basis or a cultural heritage behind them. It may also just be for the RuleOfCool: "Khan" gives you XtremeKoolLetterz, after all.
10
11This doesn't of course apply to other parts of the world, such as nations like UsefulNotes/{{Afghanistan}}, UsefulNotes/{{Pakistan}}, UsefulNotes/{{India}} where the surname has a lot of positive and heroic connotations, with a number of famous kings, sportsmen, and movie-stars having this as their surname, and it being seen as a very noble, and bold name.
12
13An example of NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast.
14
15----
16->[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwKryuazNMk&t=52s KHAAAAAAAAAAAN!!!]] [[note]]Kirk's famous [[SkywardScream scream]] in ''Film/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan''[[/note]]
17----
18!!Examples:
19
20[[foldercontrol]]
21
22[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
23* The leader of Neo-Zeon in ''Anime/MobileSuitZetaGundam'' and ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamZZ'' officially has her named spelled "Haman Ka'''r'''n", but it has a non-rhotic pronunciation identical to "Khan".
24[[/folder]]
25
26[[folder:Comic Books]]
27* ''ComicBook/IronFist'': ''ComicBook/IronFist1975'' had two; Master Khan, the first BigBad of the run, and Chaka Khan ("Crime Lord of New York!" There's no relation between the two.
28* ''ComicBook/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica'': Manga Khan is an intergalactic trader with a gaseous body who wears a metal suit to give him his form. The suit makes him immune to harm as well as granting him tremendous strength.
29* ''ComicBook/MsMarvel'': ''ComicBook/MsMarvel2014'' has Kamala Khan thoroughly averts this of course, being that she's a superhero born to immigrants from Pakistan where there is no stigma attached to that name at all.
30* ''ComicBook/NewGods'': Yuga Khan, the father of ComicBook/{{Darkseid}} and the only being in creation considered more evil than he is. However, he's only concerned with the Source itself rather than universal domination.
31* ''ComicBook/PlanetOfTheApes2011'': The villain of the last arc is a gorilla, who leads an army of apes and humans, called the Golden Khan.
32* ''ComicBook/{{Shakara}}'': One of the alien emperors that Shakara has set his sights on is a violent BloodKnight named Warlord Skulka, Supreme Khan of the Xorn Empire.
33* ''ComicBook/XMen'': ''ComicBook/XTremeXMen'' had Khan, a tyrannical dictator of a vast extra-dimensional empire who once sought to take over Earth and add ComicBook/{{Storm|MarvelComics}} to his BattleHarem, [[AndNowYouMustMarryMe by force]].
34[[/folder]]
35
36[[folder:Comic Strips]]
37* First played straight, then averted in ''ComicStrip/FunkyWinkerbean''. Funky's helicopter is shot down by the Taliban and he's taken prisoner by a group of Afghan bandits led by a man named Khan. He eventually escapes and is pursued by them. When he returns to Afghanistan as a civilian contractor to work on clearing minefields, Khan has started working for the same organization as a local guide, and saves Funky's life when he steps on a Bouncing Betty. He later moved to Westview and ran an Afghan deli called Citizen Khan's for a while.
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Fan Works]]
41* The leaders of the Mongol and Timurid invasions in ''LetsPlay/AScotsmanInEgypt'' are khans, though in both cases they're [[PuppetKing mere figureheads]] having obtained their position through connections, [[DragonInChief the truly dangerous ones are their seconds-in-command]].
42[[/folder]]
43
44[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
45* Shere Khan in ''WesternAnimation/TheJungleBook1967'' is, if anything, ''more'' of a villain than he was in the book. He chooses to hunt humans for sport, rather than out of desperation because of a crippled leg.
46* Averted in WesternAnimation/{{Mulan}} with Khan, the Fa family's horse.
47* Tzekel-Kan in ''WesternAnimation/TheRoadToElDorado'' is the main villain, though he's Native American, rather than Asian like most examples of the trope.
48* ''WesternAnimation/TheSecretOfMulan'': The leader of the invading army is named Mala Khan.
49[[/folder]]
50
51[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
52* Defied with Rizwan Khan from ''Film/MyNameIsKhan'', whose primary goal is to tell the American president that, although his name is Khan, he is not a terrorist. The movie in general deconstructs this trope through the lens of post-9/11 islamophobia, showing how Rizwan and his family's life is negatively affected by their name.
53* The BigBad in Film/JamesBond film ''Film/{{Octopussy}}'' is the WickedCultured Kamal Khan.
54* Khan Noonien Singh is the BigBad of ''Film/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan'' [[spoiler:and ''Film/StarTrekIntoDarkness'']].
55* The BigBad of ''Film/TheShadow'' is an Asian psychic named Shiwan Khan. {{Justified|Trope}} in that he claims to be the last descendant of UsefulNotes/GenghisKhan. [[ArtisticLicenseHistory Which is unlikely]]: [[http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/gnxp/2010/08/1-in-200-men-direct-descendants-of-genghis-khan/ not only can approximately 1 in 200 men in the WORLD make that claim,]] but "Genghis Khan" was just a regnal name (literally meaning "universal war-leader") and his real name was Temujin Borjigin.
56[[/folder]]
57
58[[folder:Literature]]
59* ''Literature/TheJungleBook'' has the BigBad Shere Khan the tiger, hunter of man and ruler of the jungle. The name literally means “Tiger King”.
60* Pseudo-example in ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire''. The dothraki are based on many nomadic peoples, but the Mongol and Hun influences are particularly strong; so it is their leaders take the title "khal," and many other words in their language derived from the same.
61* ''Literature/{{Prehistoria}}'' subverts the convention in a naturalistic sense depending on which species is involved. To pretty much any other animal in the forest, Khan the ''Tarbosaurus'' is a terrifying apex predator to be avoided. To his children he’s a [[PapaWolf protective]] and doting father. To the ''Adasaurus'' protagonist, Ruby, he’s a GentleGiant symbiotic partner.
62* The Star Wars Expanded Universe/Legends has both the Sith Lord Skere Kaan, and the [[ScaryDogmaticAliens Yuuzhan Vong]] commander Loiric Kaan.
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
66* The iconic Khan Noonien Singh of ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' is an EvilOverlord from Earth's distant history, put in suspended animation and revived during the series to become one of Captain Kirk's greatest enemies. He's said to be an ethnic Sikh (though [[PlaysGreatEthnics played by a Latino]], Creator/RicardoMontalban).
67* Khan's descendent, La'an Noonien Singh is a main character on ''Series/StarTrekStrangeNewWorlds'' and has suffered discrimination her whole life due to being descended from him. She has a chance to [[spoiler: go back in time and [[HitlersTimeTravelExemptionAct kill a young Khan]], but not only is it a case of WouldntHurtAChild but Khan's atrocities actually inspired the world to reform and make the Federation possible so she can't kill him.]]
68* ''Series/XenaWarriorPrincess'': the StoryArc set in China features an enemy warlord named Khan, based on UsefulNotes/GenghisKhan.
69* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
70** One of the [[AlwaysChaoticEvil Daleks]] from the Cult of Skaro is named Dalek Caan, pronounced the same way as Khan. Although the "villain" part of the trope was actually ''subverted'' in the third story arc he appeared in, where going somewhat mad caused him to [[MySpeciesDothProtestTooMuch switch sides]] and betray his fellow Daleks.
71** Inverted with Thirteenth Doctor companion Yasmin Khan.
72* Two episodes of ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' involve our heroes dealing with a cyberterrorist named Ajay Khan. In both cases, however, they're using him to catch even worse bad guys.
73* The {{toku}} series ''Series/DenkouChoujinGridman'' has a [[MagicalComputer computer demon]] named Kahn Digifer. Its American adaptation ''Series/SuperhumanSamuraiSyberSquad'', where the same character (now an [[AIIsACrapshoot unfriendly artificial intelligence]]) is named Kilokahn, also counts.
74[[/folder]]
75
76[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
77* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'' actually averts this with the White Scars chapter of SpaceMarines (Mongols JustForFun/InSpace having traded their horses for huge weaponized motorbikes), who have always been loyal to the Imperium and use Khan as an indication of leadership (their Primarch was Jaghatai Khan, their rank for Chapter Master is Great Khan, etc.). To be fair ''Warhammer 40,000'' is less [[BlackAndWhiteMorality "Good vs. Evil"]] and more [[BlackAndGrayMorality "Bad vs. Worse"]] -- then again, Jaghatai is far from the worst person on his own side.
78* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}''
79** Played straight: where the FantasyCounterpartCulture to the Mongols are the AlwaysChaoticEvil ogres and hobgoblins, with the hobgoblin's leaders known as Khans.
80** Also with the Kurgan, who are a much better-researched FantasyCounterpartCulture to the Mongols and Steppe Warrior cultures in general, and in the service of the Chaos Gods to boot.
81** A particularly old and repulsive Chaos champion was the Kurgan Maggotlord named Tamurkhan, who could possess the people who killed him and retain their abilities for a while until their bodies rotted away. He also gets away with a double for NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast since he derives from another great Central Asian warlord in addition to Genghis Khan, Timur, his spiritual successor who nearly reunified his empire.
82* One of the sample antagonists in ''TabletopGame/SpiritOfTheCentury'' is the evil conqueror Gorilla Khan, an [[UpliftedAnimal uplifted gorilla]]-- although his cape and helmet make him look more Roman than Mongol.
83* In ''TabletopGame/BattleTech'' the leaders of the Clans are known as Khans, the second -in-command of a Clan is known as saKhan and the leader of all the Clans (when such a thing is necessary) is the ilKhan or "Khan of Khans".
84[[/folder]]
85
86[[folder:Toys]]
87* Obscure collectible battle game ''Fistful of Aliens'' has Jangutz Khan, the "vicious and cruel" ultra-rare figure. While none of the characters in the line were truly "good," Jangutz was insane and powerful, and enslaved other races.
88[[/folder]]
89
90[[folder:Video Games]]
91* In ''Franchise/MortalKombat'', "Kahnum" (note the spelling difference) is apparently the title of [[TheEmperor the Ruler]] of Outworld, and the current ruler upon being elected is given a new name that includes the word "Kahn." For much of the series the BigBad is [[Characters/MortalKombatShao Shao Kahn]] The Konqueror, a violent, barbarian warlord. His successor in ''VideoGame/MortalKombatX'' is Kotal Kahn (formerly just called Ko'atal) and is actaully a subversion to this Trope. Despite the title and position as Emperor of a violent war-filled realm, Kotal is a NobleDemon who, at his worst, is just an AntiVillain. Averted with [[spoiler:Past!Kitana]] in ''VideoGame/MortalKombat11'', who killed [[spoiler:Shao Kahn of the past]] after Kotal's CareerEndingInjury led him to pass the throne to her, technically [[spoiler:making her 'Kitana Kahn', but a majority of the people don't refer to her as that]]. ''VideoGame/MortalKombat1'', being a reboot, plays with this based on the above: The ruler of Outworld is Sindel, but she's never referred as Sindel Kahn. Meanwhile, Shao Kahn is reinvented into General Shao, losing his Kahn title, but also undergoing a slight positive personality tweak as opposed to his purely brutal, violent attitude when he was Kahn.
92* ''Franchise/{{Fallout}}'' has a recurring tribe of raiders known as the Khans. Their most recent incarnation, the Great Khans -- led by Papa Khan -- take particular inspiration from the aesthetics of Mongolian culture, and a possible ending for them in ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'' has them begin more directly emulating the Mongol Empire [[RepressiveButEfficient (for good and ill)]] thanks to a history book.
93** Three examples from that series exist. There was the original group of Vault-exiled raiders called the Khans, their successors - refounded after the first group's extinction - called the New Khans, and finally the Great Khans, which reformed from the scattered New Khans and took over a big piece of Nevada, before being whittled down to Red Rock Canyon. If the Courier convinces them to do so, the Great Khans will just leave Nevada to the NCR and go conquer Wyoming and with the help of the Followers of the Apocalypse create a mighty empire. Or you could convince them to join Caesar's Legion and have all of their tribe history to be stamped out and forced to become a gear in the Legion war machine.
94* In ''VideoGame/CrusaderKings'' the Altaic (steppe) cultures all use "khan" where Europeans use "king", so given the game's VideoGameCrueltyPotential and {{realpolitik}} this is true more often than not. The games also feature event invasions by the Mongol hordes, up to and including Temujin, UsefulNotes/GenghisKhan, himself. (A Mongol PlayerCharacter can even declare themselves Genghis Khan in the second game.)
95* Khan is the villain's name in ''VideoGame/BrokenSword''. He is a ProfessionalKiller from Syria and member of an assassination cult called the Hashashin.
96* ''VideoGame/{{Magicka}}'' has an Orc warlord named Khan appearing along with a large invading army. While Khan may be a semi-appropriate name for a leader of nomadic invaders, the devs admitted that they just wanted an excuse to do a ''Film/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan''-parody SkywardScream.
97* ''VideoGame/{{Stellaris}}'' has a mid-game event in which one of the various Marauder factions suddenly unites under a Great Khan, a VisionaryVillain who wants to build a united, enlightened galactic empire, and becomes an expansionist, conquering Horde. They’re tough to beat, but submitting to them isn’t so bad - satrapies have to pay a hefty tribute but are otherwise left to do as they please, and the Khan themself will die on their own eventually, which can lead to any number of outcomes depending on how large the Khanate became. It may revert to its old ways, it may become a stable power, or it may just collapse into two or more squabbling successor states.
98* ''VideoGame/DoomEternal'' has the Khan Maykr, an angelic being who leads the Heaven-esque Urdak and serves as the game's central antagonist, due to working with Hell to unleash demons upon Earth for her own purposes.
99* ''VideoGame/GhostOfTsushima'': The leader of the Mongol army attacking Japan is Khotun Khan. In this case, it makes sense, considering he's a (fictional) grandson of good old UsefulNotes/GenghisKhan himself.
100** The ''Iki Island'' DLC also has a rare female example in the form of Ankhsar Khatun, the shaman leader of the Eagle Tribe that is attacking Iki. In this case, 'Khatun' was the female equivalent of the 'Khan' rank in the Mongol Empire, which makes her just as fearsome as Khotun Khan.
101[[/folder]]
102
103[[folder:Webcomics]]
104* Vincent Kahn from ''Webcomic/{{EVIL|2016}}'', although he's [[AffablyEvil actually a pretty cool guy]].
105[[/folder]]
106
107[[folder:Western Animation]]
108* {{Downplayed}} on ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill'' where Hank's new jerkass neighbor and main antagonist is named Kahn[[note]]a SignificantAnagram of Hank[[/note]] Souphanousinphone.
109* Kobra Khan from ''WesternAnimation/HeManAndTheMastersOfTheUniverse2002''. Ironically, while most races of Eternia are afraid of him, given [[TheDreaded the reputation of his species]], the [[SnakePeople Snake Men]], his own species doesn't respect him much, thinking he's grown soft living so long without others of his kind around.
110* ''WesternAnimation/JackieChanAdventures'' has the Shadowkhan, demonic [[LivingShadow shadow]] warriors that are divided into nine tribes under Tarakudo and his nine [[{{Youkai}} Oni]] Generals, with the tribe composed of {{ninja}}s serving Shendu for the first two seasons.
111* ''WesternAnimation/TaleSpin'' has yet another version of Shere Khan, this one a CorruptCorporateExecutive who would make Lex Luthor proud.

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