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Gökböri

Gökböri (also rendered Gokbori, Kukburi and Kukuburi), or Muzaffar ad-Din Gökböri (Arabic: مظفر الدين كوكبوري, full praise names: al-Malik al-Muazzam (the Exalted Prince) Muzaffar ad-Din (the Triumphant in the Faith)), was a leading emir and general of Sultan Saladin (Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn Yūsuf ibn Ayyūb), and ruler of Erbil.[1] He served both the Zengid and Ayyubid rulers of Syria and Egypt. He played a pivotal role in Saladin's conquest of Northern Syria and the Jazira (Upper Mesopotamia) and later held major commands in a number of battles against the Crusader states and the forces of the Third Crusade. He was known as Manafaradin, a corruption of his principal praise name, to the Franks of the Crusader states.

Muzaffar ad-Din Gökböri
Shrine to Gökböri in Erbil, Iraq.
BornApril 1154
Mosul, Zengid Atabegate
DiedJune 1233 (aged 78)
Balad, Abbasid Caliphate
Buried Ibn Khallikan p. 542, all dates and places
AllegianceZengids
Ayyubids
Abbasids
RankEmir
Commands heldGeneral commanding armies and divisions of armies. Governor of various cities and regions. Lord of Erbil
Battles/wars

Gökböri was the first Muslim ruler to publicly celebrate the birth of Islamic prophet Muhammad in an impressive ceremony during which al-Mawlid al-Nabawi (Mawlid or Mavlid, poetry celebrating the Prophet's Birthday) was recited.[2]

Origins and early life

Gökböri, whose name means "Blue-wolf" in Old Turkic, was the son of Zain ad-Din Ali Kutchek, the Emir of Erbil (known as Arbela in contemporary Arab usage). Gökböri's ancestry was Turcoman and his family, known as the Begtegīnids, were associated with the Seljuk Turks. On the death of his father in August 1168, the fourteen-year-old Gökböri succeeded to the lordship of Erbil. However, the atabeg of Erbil, Kaimaz, deposed Gökböri in favour of his younger brother, Zain ad-Din Yusuf. Gökböri, exiled from his city, eventually took service with the Zengid prince Saif ad-Din Ghazi ibn Maudud of Mosul. The lord of Mosul granted Gökböri the city of Harran as a fief.[3][4][5]

Gökböri as a prominent Zengid military commander

During the decade from 1164, Saladin, originally a subject of Nur ad-Din the Zengid ruler of Syria, had made himself master of Egypt. Saladin was ambitious to unite Egypt and Syria under his own rule, and was asserting a level of independence that his titular master, Nur ad-Din, could not accept. In 1174 Nur ad-Din prepared his army to march on Egypt, but he died before he could move against Saladin. Following the death of Nur ad-Din, Saladin invaded Syria. Gökböri commanded the right wing of the Zengid army defeated by Saladin on 13 April 1175 at the Horns of Hama. During the battle the right wing of the Zengid army broke Saladin's left flank, before being routed in turn by a charge of Saladin's guard.[6]

Gökböri aids Saladin's conquest of Northern Syria and the Jazira (Upper Mesopotamia)

Following the Zengid defeat at Hama, and the continuing lack any unifying figure in the mould of Nur ad-Din, Gökböri realised that Zengid power was on the wane in Syria and the Jazira and he made the momentous decision to defect to Saladin in 1182. Saladin had been repulsed from Beirut and was marching on Aleppo when Gökböri visited him with an invitation to cross the Euphrates into the Jazira, where he was assured he would be welcomed. His support for Saladin was instrumental in the defeat of Zengid power in the region; soon little more than the cities of Mosul and Aleppo remained under Zengid control.[7][8]

In 1185 Saladin was campaigning against Izz ad-Din Mas'ud, the Zengid ruler of Mosul. At this time Gökböri came under suspicion of collusion with Izz ad-DIn. Gökböri had promised the sultan a large sum of money towards the cost of the campaign, but was unable to produce it. Saladin had Gökböri arrested, but quickly released him. Saladin became gravely ill during this campaign, but was nursed back to health in Gökböri's castle at Harran. In 1186 the war ended, when Izz ad-Din Mas'ud agreed to become Saladin's vassal.[9][10]

Following the conquest of Northern Syria and the Jazira, Saladin added Edessa (Urfa) and Samsat to Gökböri's lands. He was then given Saladin's sister, al-Sitt Rabia Khatun, in marriage.[7]

War against the Crusader states

 
The Battle of Hattin, an imaginary scene where Saladin wrests the relic of the True Cross from King Guy of Jerusalem. Illustration from the works of Matthew Paris, English, mid 13th century

Gökböri became known as a reliable and skilled military leader. Saladin's secretary, the historian Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani, described him as: "... the audacious, the hero of well thought out projects, the lion who heads straight for the target, the most reliable and firmest chief."[7]

In Saladin's campaigns against the Crusader states Gökböri was given important commands. At the Battle of Cresson (1187) he led an army of 700–7,000 which defeated a Christian army containing a large contingent from the military orders. The Christian army was destroyed and the master of the Knights Hospitaller, Roger de Moulins, was killed.[11] The military exploits of Gökböri were recorded in the contemporary accounts of his Christian enemies, to whom he was known as Manafaradin.[12]

Gökböri's finest military achievement was at the Battle of Hattin in 1187, where he commanded the left of the Ayyubid army. Saladin commanded the centre and his nephew, Taqi ad-Din, the right. This battle saw the destruction of army of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, leading to the fall of the greater part of the kingdom, including the holy city of Jerusalem, to Saladin. Ibn Khallikan describes how Gökböri and Saladin's nephew stood firm when the rest of the army was fleeing. They rallied the Ayyubid forces and led them in a counter-attack which decided the battle.[13][14]

In 1190, during the Siege of Acre by the forces of the Third Crusade, Gökböri's brother Zain ad-Din Yusuf died. Gökböri then petitioned Saladin for the return of his paternal inheritance of the city of Erbil. He received Erbil and Shahrozur, but surrendered Edessa, Harran and Samsat, which were granted to Taqi ad-Din. Though the siege was ongoing, Saladin allowed Gökböri to go to Erbil to establish his authority in the city. Taqi ad-Din was summoned to take over the troops previously commanded by Gökböri. Gökböri entered Erbil in January 1191.[15][16][17]

Ruler of Erbil

 
Mudhafaria Minaret, Erbil, built by Gökböri

Gökböri remained the ruler of Erbil until his death. After the death of his patron Saladin, in 1193, he was effectively an independent ruler, acknowledging no superior other than the Caliph. He was a great patron of writers, poets, artists and scholars, whom he invited to Erbil.[2] His administration of Erbil was assisted by the scholar Ibn al-Mustawfi, one of his viziers, who wrote the history of Erbil in four volumes. Gökböri was also a patron of the biographer and historian Ibn Khallikan. He was a devout Sunni Muslim and built extensively in his domains for both the spiritual and corporeal needs of his subjects, creating a religious college, the Dar al-Hadith al-Muzaffariya (founded in 1198), sufi convents (khanqah), a travellers' inn and a number of establishments for the blind, orphans and widows.[18][19]

He was particularly noted as a fervent celebrator of Mawlid, a ceremonial recitation of praise poems celebrating Muhammad on the anniversary of his birth. Previous to Gökböri, such celebrations consisted of private observances or court processions. Those of Gökböri were held in public, preceded by hunting parties and accompanied by lavish sacrifices. This has been seen by later commentators as representing a level of syncretism with pre-Islamic, traditional, Turkish practices called Siğir and Shölen.[20]

The long reign of Gökböri in Erbil, which became a thriving centre of Sunni learning, was largely due to his highly developed political acumen and judicious choice of alliances. He always made himself more useful as an ally of major powers than attractive as a potential target for their aggression. Though he married into the Ayyubid dynasty, two of his daughters married Zengids. Later in his reign he used alliance with al-Muazzam of Damascus as a counterbalance to the threats of al-Malik al-Ashraf and Badr al-Din Lu'lu'. Badr al-Din Lu'lu' was appointed as atabeg for the successive child-rulers of Mosul, Nur al-Din Arslan Shah II and his younger brother, Nasir al-Din Mahmud. Both rulers were grandsons of Gökböri, and this probably accounts for the animosity between him and Lu'lu'. In 1126 Gökböri, in alliance with al-Muazzam, attacked Mosul, while his ally attacked Homs. As a result of this military pressure, al-Ashraf and Lu'lu' made their submission to al-Muazzam, though al-Muazzam died the following year. Nasir al-Din Mahmud was the last Zengid ruler of Mosul, he disappears from the records soon after Gökböri's death. He was killed by Lu'lu', by strangulation or starvation, and his killer then formally began to rule in Mosul.[21][19][22]

Death

Being without a male heir, Gökböri willed Erbil to the Abbasid Caliph al-Mustansir.[23]

In old age he campaigned against the Mongols, during their first approaches to Mesopotamia, which they were soon to overrun and devastate. Falling ill, he returned to his lands where he died in June 1233.[24] Three years later, in 1236, the Mongols sacked Erbil, but were unable to take the citadel; in 1258, during the Siege of Baghdad, Erbil fell to the Mongol general Oroktu Noyan.[25]

References

  1. ^ Ibn Khallikan, p. 535
  2. ^ a b İbrahim Kafesoğlu (1994). Erdoğan Merçil; Hidayet Yavuz Nuhoğlu; et al. (eds.). A Short History of Turkish-Islamic States (excluding the Ottoman State). Translated by Ahmet Edip Uysal. Turkish Historical Society Printing House. p. 184. ISBN 9789751605719.
  3. ^ Phillips, Jonathan (2019). "Progress in Syria and Reynald's Red Sea Raid". The Life and Legend of the Sultan Saladin. Random House. p. 391. The Turkmen ruler of Harran, Muzaffar al-Din Keukburi ('Keukburi' is a Turkish name meaning 'Blue Wolf') approached Saladin offering to support his plans.
  4. ^ Ibn Khallikan, pp. 535-536
  5. ^ Nováček et al., p. 4
  6. ^ Baha' ad-Din, pp. 73-74
  7. ^ a b c Nicholson and Nicolle, p. 17
  8. ^ Hazard, pp. 576-577
  9. ^ Runciman, pp. 445-446
  10. ^ Ehrenkreutz, p. 189
  11. ^ Nicholson, p. 25
  12. ^ Stubbs, p. 6
  13. ^ Ibn Khallikan, pp. 536-537
  14. ^ Runciman. p. 455
  15. ^ Baha' ad-Din, p. 218
  16. ^ Ibn Khallikan, p. 537
  17. ^ Album, p. 121
  18. ^ Ibn Khallikan, p. 537-539
  19. ^ a b Encyclopaedia of Islam, 'Begteginids'
  20. ^ Çaǧatay, p. 129
  21. ^ Gibb, pp. 700-701
  22. ^ Patton, pp. 152-155
  23. ^ Morray, p. 85
  24. ^ Nicolle, p. 59
  25. ^ Howorth, pp. 132, 203

Bibliography

  • Album, S. (1977) Marsden's Numismata Orientalia Illustrata, Attic Books Limited, London, Ontario ISBN 9780915018161. Reprint of a private printing dating from 1823–1825, in London, England, by William Marsden.
  • Baha' Ad-Din Yusuf Ibn Shaddad (Beha Ed-Din), trans. C.W. Wilson (1897) Saladin Or What Befell Sultan Yusuf, Palestine Pilgrims' Text Society, London. Reprinted, 2002, Elibron Classics, Adamant Media, Boston ISBN 9781402192463 [1]
  • Çaǧatay, N. (1968) "The Tradition of Mavlid Recitations in Islam Particularly in Turkey", Studia Islamica, No. 28, Maisonneuve & Larose (Brill, Leiden). DOI: 10.2307/1595265 [2]
  • Ehrenkreutz, A.S. (1972) Saladin, State University of New York Press, Albany NY. ISBN 9780873950954
  • Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition First published online: 2012, P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel and W.P. Heinrichs (eds.), Brill, Leiden, Online version: section on the Begteginids [3] First published online: 2012. First print edition (1960-2007): ISBN 9789004161214
  • Gibb, H.A.R. (1962) "The Aiyubids", in History of the Crusades, Volume 2: The Later Crusades, 1189-1311, Wolff, R.L. and Hazzard, H.W. (eds.), Ch. XX, pp. 693–714, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia PA. [4]
  • Hazard, H.W (1958) "The Rise of Saladin 1169–1189", in A History of the Crusades, Volume 1 (M.W. Baldwin ed.), University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia PA, pp. 563–589. ISBN 9780299048440 [5]
  • Howorth, Sir Henry H. (1876) History of the Mongols: From the 9th to the 19th Century, Volume 1, reprinted (2008) Cosimo Inc., New York ISBN 9781605201337
  • Ibn Khallikan (1843) Kitab wafayat ala'yan - Ibn Khallikan's Biographical Dictionary, transl. by Guillaume, Baron Mac-Guckin de Slane, Volume 2, Paris.[6]
  • Morray D.W. (1994) An Ayyubid Notable and His World: Ibn Al-ʻAdīm and Aleppo as Portrayed in His Biographical Dictionary of People Associated with the City, Brill. Leiden. ISBN 9004099565
  • Nicholson, H (trans.) (1997) Chronicle of the Third Crusade: A Translation of the Itinerarium Peregrinorum Et Gesta Regis Ricardi, Ashgate, Farnham. ISBN 0-7546-0581-7
  • Nicholson, H and Nicolle, D (2006) God's Warriors: Knights Templar, Saracens and the Battle for Jerusalem, Osprey Publishing, Oxford. ISBN 1846031435
  • Nicolle, D. (2001) The Crusades, Osprey Publishing, Oxford. ISBN 978-1841761794
  • Nováček, K., Amin, N.A.M. and Melčák, M. (2013) A Medieval City Within Assyrian Walls: The Continuity of the Town of Arbil in Northern Mesopotamia, Iraq, Vol 75, pp. 1–42, British Institute for the Study of Iraq, London. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021088900000401 [7]
  • Patton, D. (1988) Ibn al-Sāʿi's Account of the Last of the Zangids, Zeitschrift der Deutschen, Morgenländischen Gesellschaft, Vol. 138, No. 1, pp. 148–158, Harrassowitz Verlag Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/43377738 [8]
  • Runciman, Steven (1952). A History of the Crusades, Volume II: The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East, 1100–1187. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. (Reprint 1990, Penguin, London ISBN 9780140137040)
  • Stubbs, W. (ed.)(1864) Itinerarium Peregrinorum et Gesta Regis Ricardi (original text in Latin), Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, and Green, London. Available at Gallica

gökböri, also, rendered, gokbori, kukburi, kukuburi, muzaffar, arabic, مظفر, الدين, كوكبوري, full, praise, names, malik, muazzam, exalted, prince, muzaffar, triumphant, faith, leading, emir, general, sultan, saladin, Ṣalāḥ, dīn, yūsuf, ayyūb, ruler, erbil, ser. Gokbori also rendered Gokbori Kukburi and Kukuburi or Muzaffar ad Din Gokbori Arabic مظفر الدين كوكبوري full praise names al Malik al Muazzam the Exalted Prince Muzaffar ad Din the Triumphant in the Faith was a leading emir and general of Sultan Saladin Ṣalaḥ ad Din Yusuf ibn Ayyub and ruler of Erbil 1 He served both the Zengid and Ayyubid rulers of Syria and Egypt He played a pivotal role in Saladin s conquest of Northern Syria and the Jazira Upper Mesopotamia and later held major commands in a number of battles against the Crusader states and the forces of the Third Crusade He was known as Manafaradin a corruption of his principal praise name to the Franks of the Crusader states Muzaffar ad Din GokboriShrine to Gokbori in Erbil Iraq BornApril 1154Mosul Zengid AtabegateDiedJune 1233 aged 78 Balad Abbasid CaliphateBuriedKufa Ibn Khallikan p 542 all dates and placesAllegianceZengids Ayyubids AbbasidsRankEmirCommands heldGeneral commanding armies and divisions of armies Governor of various cities and regions Lord of ErbilBattles warsBattle of the Horns of Hama Battle of Belvoir Castle Battle of Cresson Battle of Hattin Third Crusade Siege of AcreGokbori was the first Muslim ruler to publicly celebrate the birth of Islamic prophet Muhammad in an impressive ceremony during which al Mawlid al Nabawi Mawlid or Mavlid poetry celebrating the Prophet s Birthday was recited 2 Contents 1 Origins and early life 2 Gokbori as a prominent Zengid military commander 3 Gokbori aids Saladin s conquest of Northern Syria and the Jazira Upper Mesopotamia 4 War against the Crusader states 5 Ruler of Erbil 6 Death 7 References 8 BibliographyOrigins and early life Edit Citadel of Erbil Iraqi Kurdistan Gokbori whose name means Blue wolf in Old Turkic was the son of Zain ad Din Ali Kutchek the Emir of Erbil known as Arbela in contemporary Arab usage Gokbori s ancestry was Turcoman and his family known as the Begteginids were associated with the Seljuk Turks On the death of his father in August 1168 the fourteen year old Gokbori succeeded to the lordship of Erbil However the atabeg of Erbil Kaimaz deposed Gokbori in favour of his younger brother Zain ad Din Yusuf Gokbori exiled from his city eventually took service with the Zengid prince Saif ad Din Ghazi ibn Maudud of Mosul The lord of Mosul granted Gokbori the city of Harran as a fief 3 4 5 Gokbori as a prominent Zengid military commander EditDuring the decade from 1164 Saladin originally a subject of Nur ad Din the Zengid ruler of Syria had made himself master of Egypt Saladin was ambitious to unite Egypt and Syria under his own rule and was asserting a level of independence that his titular master Nur ad Din could not accept In 1174 Nur ad Din prepared his army to march on Egypt but he died before he could move against Saladin Following the death of Nur ad Din Saladin invaded Syria Gokbori commanded the right wing of the Zengid army defeated by Saladin on 13 April 1175 at the Horns of Hama During the battle the right wing of the Zengid army broke Saladin s left flank before being routed in turn by a charge of Saladin s guard 6 Gokbori aids Saladin s conquest of Northern Syria and the Jazira Upper Mesopotamia EditFollowing the Zengid defeat at Hama and the continuing lack any unifying figure in the mould of Nur ad Din Gokbori realised that Zengid power was on the wane in Syria and the Jazira and he made the momentous decision to defect to Saladin in 1182 Saladin had been repulsed from Beirut and was marching on Aleppo when Gokbori visited him with an invitation to cross the Euphrates into the Jazira where he was assured he would be welcomed His support for Saladin was instrumental in the defeat of Zengid power in the region soon little more than the cities of Mosul and Aleppo remained under Zengid control 7 8 In 1185 Saladin was campaigning against Izz ad Din Mas ud the Zengid ruler of Mosul At this time Gokbori came under suspicion of collusion with Izz ad DIn Gokbori had promised the sultan a large sum of money towards the cost of the campaign but was unable to produce it Saladin had Gokbori arrested but quickly released him Saladin became gravely ill during this campaign but was nursed back to health in Gokbori s castle at Harran In 1186 the war ended when Izz ad Din Mas ud agreed to become Saladin s vassal 9 10 Following the conquest of Northern Syria and the Jazira Saladin added Edessa Urfa and Samsat to Gokbori s lands He was then given Saladin s sister al Sitt Rabia Khatun in marriage 7 War against the Crusader states Edit The Battle of Hattin an imaginary scene where Saladin wrests the relic of the True Cross from King Guy of Jerusalem Illustration from the works of Matthew Paris English mid 13th century Gokbori became known as a reliable and skilled military leader Saladin s secretary the historian Imad ad Din al Isfahani described him as the audacious the hero of well thought out projects the lion who heads straight for the target the most reliable and firmest chief 7 In Saladin s campaigns against the Crusader states Gokbori was given important commands At the Battle of Cresson 1187 he led an army of 700 7 000 which defeated a Christian army containing a large contingent from the military orders The Christian army was destroyed and the master of the Knights Hospitaller Roger de Moulins was killed 11 The military exploits of Gokbori were recorded in the contemporary accounts of his Christian enemies to whom he was known as Manafaradin 12 Gokbori s finest military achievement was at the Battle of Hattin in 1187 where he commanded the left of the Ayyubid army Saladin commanded the centre and his nephew Taqi ad Din the right This battle saw the destruction of army of the Kingdom of Jerusalem leading to the fall of the greater part of the kingdom including the holy city of Jerusalem to Saladin Ibn Khallikan describes how Gokbori and Saladin s nephew stood firm when the rest of the army was fleeing They rallied the Ayyubid forces and led them in a counter attack which decided the battle 13 14 In 1190 during the Siege of Acre by the forces of the Third Crusade Gokbori s brother Zain ad Din Yusuf died Gokbori then petitioned Saladin for the return of his paternal inheritance of the city of Erbil He received Erbil and Shahrozur but surrendered Edessa Harran and Samsat which were granted to Taqi ad Din Though the siege was ongoing Saladin allowed Gokbori to go to Erbil to establish his authority in the city Taqi ad Din was summoned to take over the troops previously commanded by Gokbori Gokbori entered Erbil in January 1191 15 16 17 Ruler of Erbil Edit Mudhafaria Minaret Erbil built by Gokbori Gokbori remained the ruler of Erbil until his death After the death of his patron Saladin in 1193 he was effectively an independent ruler acknowledging no superior other than the Caliph He was a great patron of writers poets artists and scholars whom he invited to Erbil 2 His administration of Erbil was assisted by the scholar Ibn al Mustawfi one of his viziers who wrote the history of Erbil in four volumes Gokbori was also a patron of the biographer and historian Ibn Khallikan He was a devout Sunni Muslim and built extensively in his domains for both the spiritual and corporeal needs of his subjects creating a religious college the Dar al Hadith al Muzaffariya founded in 1198 sufi convents khanqah a travellers inn and a number of establishments for the blind orphans and widows 18 19 He was particularly noted as a fervent celebrator of Mawlid a ceremonial recitation of praise poems celebrating Muhammad on the anniversary of his birth Previous to Gokbori such celebrations consisted of private observances or court processions Those of Gokbori were held in public preceded by hunting parties and accompanied by lavish sacrifices This has been seen by later commentators as representing a level of syncretism with pre Islamic traditional Turkish practices called Sigir and Sholen 20 The long reign of Gokbori in Erbil which became a thriving centre of Sunni learning was largely due to his highly developed political acumen and judicious choice of alliances He always made himself more useful as an ally of major powers than attractive as a potential target for their aggression Though he married into the Ayyubid dynasty two of his daughters married Zengids Later in his reign he used alliance with al Muazzam of Damascus as a counterbalance to the threats of al Malik al Ashraf and Badr al Din Lu lu Badr al Din Lu lu was appointed as atabeg for the successive child rulers of Mosul Nur al Din Arslan Shah II and his younger brother Nasir al Din Mahmud Both rulers were grandsons of Gokbori and this probably accounts for the animosity between him and Lu lu In 1126 Gokbori in alliance with al Muazzam attacked Mosul while his ally attacked Homs As a result of this military pressure al Ashraf and Lu lu made their submission to al Muazzam though al Muazzam died the following year Nasir al Din Mahmud was the last Zengid ruler of Mosul he disappears from the records soon after Gokbori s death He was killed by Lu lu by strangulation or starvation and his killer then formally began to rule in Mosul 21 19 22 Death EditBeing without a male heir Gokbori willed Erbil to the Abbasid Caliph al Mustansir 23 In old age he campaigned against the Mongols during their first approaches to Mesopotamia which they were soon to overrun and devastate Falling ill he returned to his lands where he died in June 1233 24 Three years later in 1236 the Mongols sacked Erbil but were unable to take the citadel in 1258 during the Siege of Baghdad Erbil fell to the Mongol general Oroktu Noyan 25 References Edit Ibn Khallikan p 535 a b Ibrahim Kafesoglu 1994 Erdogan Mercil Hidayet Yavuz Nuhoglu et al eds A Short History of Turkish Islamic States excluding the Ottoman State Translated by Ahmet Edip Uysal Turkish Historical Society Printing House p 184 ISBN 9789751605719 Phillips Jonathan 2019 Progress in Syria and Reynald s Red Sea Raid The Life and Legend of the Sultan Saladin Random House p 391 The Turkmen ruler of Harran Muzaffar al Din Keukburi Keukburi is a Turkish name meaning Blue Wolf approached Saladin offering to support his plans Ibn Khallikan pp 535 536 Novacek et al p 4 Baha ad Din pp 73 74 a b c Nicholson and Nicolle p 17 Hazard pp 576 577 Runciman pp 445 446 Ehrenkreutz p 189 Nicholson p 25 Stubbs p 6 Ibn Khallikan pp 536 537 Runciman p 455 Baha ad Din p 218 Ibn Khallikan p 537 Album p 121 Ibn Khallikan p 537 539 a b Encyclopaedia of Islam Begteginids Caǧatay p 129 Gibb pp 700 701 Patton pp 152 155 Morray p 85 Nicolle p 59 Howorth pp 132 203Bibliography EditAlbum S 1977 Marsden s Numismata Orientalia Illustrata Attic Books Limited London Ontario ISBN 9780915018161 Reprint of a private printing dating from 1823 1825 in London England by William Marsden Baha Ad Din Yusuf Ibn Shaddad Beha Ed Din trans C W Wilson 1897 Saladin Or What Befell Sultan Yusuf Palestine Pilgrims Text Society London Reprinted 2002 Elibron Classics Adamant Media Boston ISBN 9781402192463 1 Caǧatay N 1968 The Tradition of Mavlid Recitations in Islam Particularly in Turkey Studia Islamica No 28 Maisonneuve amp Larose Brill Leiden DOI 10 2307 1595265 2 Ehrenkreutz A S 1972 Saladin State University of New York Press Albany NY ISBN 9780873950954 Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition First published online 2012 P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel and W P Heinrichs eds Brill Leiden Online version section on the Begteginids 3 First published online 2012 First print edition 1960 2007 ISBN 9789004161214 Gibb H A R 1962 The Aiyubids in History of the Crusades Volume 2 The Later Crusades 1189 1311 Wolff R L and Hazzard H W eds Ch XX pp 693 714 University of Pennsylvania Press Philadelphia PA 4 Hazard H W 1958 The Rise of Saladin 1169 1189 in A History of the Crusades Volume 1 M W Baldwin ed University of Pennsylvania Press Philadelphia PA pp 563 589 ISBN 9780299048440 5 Howorth Sir Henry H 1876 History of the Mongols From the 9th to the 19th Century Volume 1 reprinted 2008 Cosimo Inc New York ISBN 9781605201337 Ibn Khallikan 1843 Kitab wafayat ala yan Ibn Khallikan s Biographical Dictionary transl by Guillaume Baron Mac Guckin de Slane Volume 2 Paris 6 Morray D W 1994 An Ayyubid Notable and His World Ibn Al ʻAdim and Aleppo as Portrayed in His Biographical Dictionary of People Associated with the City Brill Leiden ISBN 9004099565 Nicholson H trans 1997 Chronicle of the Third Crusade A Translation of the Itinerarium Peregrinorum Et Gesta Regis Ricardi Ashgate Farnham ISBN 0 7546 0581 7 Nicholson H and Nicolle D 2006 God s Warriors Knights Templar Saracens and the Battle for Jerusalem Osprey Publishing Oxford ISBN 1846031435 Nicolle D 2001 The Crusades Osprey Publishing Oxford ISBN 978 1841761794 Novacek K Amin N A M and Melcak M 2013 A Medieval City Within Assyrian Walls The Continuity of the Town of Arbil in Northern Mesopotamia Iraq Vol 75 pp 1 42 British Institute for the Study of Iraq London DOI https doi org 10 1017 S0021088900000401 7 Patton D 1988 Ibn al Saʿi s Account of the Last of the Zangids Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenlandischen Gesellschaft Vol 138 No 1 pp 148 158 Harrassowitz Verlag Stable URL https www jstor org stable 43377738 8 Runciman Steven 1952 A History of the Crusades Volume II The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East 1100 1187 Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press Reprint 1990 Penguin London ISBN 9780140137040 Stubbs W ed 1864 Itinerarium Peregrinorum et Gesta Regis Ricardi original text in Latin Longman Green Longman Roberts and Green London Available at GallicaPortals Biography Islam Iraq Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gokbori amp oldid 1136064857, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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