The events during the start and end of Akhsitan's reign are obscure. He succeeded his father sometime after 1160. One of the coins minted during his rule is estimated to have been produced between 1160 and 1169. It has been proposed that Manuchihr III may have divided his kingdom amongst his sons upon his death, due to coin mints demonstrating the coinciding reign of Akhsitan, Shahanshah, Afridun II and his son
Fariburz II. Afridun II and Fariburz II may have ruled in the western part of the kingdom, while coin mints of Shahanshah demonstrate that he was based in
Shamakhi. However, the latter has also been suggested to have been the successor of Akhsitan. In late 1173 or early 1174, Shirvan was invaded by a combined force of the Russian "
brodnici" and the ruler of
Darband, Bek-Bars ibn Muzaffar. Akhsitan subsequently requested the help of his cousin
George III (), the king of Georgia. The latter repelled the invaders and brought back order to the affected areas. The
Eldiguzid ruler
Qizil Arslan () later seized Shamakhi, which made Akhsitan move his place of residence to
Baku. This marked the beginning of Baku's rise as a major city, though it remains uncertain if Akhsitan later moved back to Shamakhi. Akhsitan's death is not mentioned in the
divan of the Persian poet
Khaqani, which has led the modern historian Hadi Hasan to surmise that Akhsitan must have survived him. An
inscription from 1203 or 1204 mentions Farrukhzad I as the Shirvanshah. This means that Akhsitan's reign ended between 1197 and 1203 or 1204. Akhsitan's predecessors had used the title of
al-Malik ("King") on their coins, Akhsitan instead used the title of al-Maliku'l-Mu'azzam ("The Supreme Malik") like his father. He also used the title of
Shirvanshah on his coins like
Ali II of Shirvan. == Family ==