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Marwanids (Diyar Bakr)

The Marwanids or Dustakids (983/990-1085, Kurdish: میرنشینی مەروانی) were a Kurdish Sunni Muslim dynasty in the Diyar Bakr region of Upper Mesopotamia (present day northern Iraq/southeastern Turkey) and Armenia, centered on the city of Amid (Diyarbakır).

Marwanid dynasty
983/990–1085
CapitalAmid
Spoken languagesKurdish (mother tongue)[1]
Arabic (poetry/numismatics)[1]
Religion
Sunni Islam (official)
GovernmentEmirate
History 
• Established
983/990
• Disestablished
1085

Territory

The Marwanid realm in the Diyar Bakr region of Upper Mesopotamia (present day northern Iraq/southeastern Turkey) and Armenia, centered on the city of Amid (Diyarbakır).[2] They also ruled over Akhlat,[3] Bitlis,[4] Manzikert,[5] Nisibis,[6] Erciş,[5] Muradiye,[5] Siirt,[7] Cizre, Hasankayf, and temporarily ruled over Mosul[8] and Edessa.[9]

History

Origins

According to most academic sources,[10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17] the Marwanids were a Kurdish dynasty. The Encyclopaedia of Iran considers them as an Arab dynasty in one article,[18] and refers to them as a Kurdish dynasty in another article.[3] The Marwanids were Sunni Muslims.[19]

The founder of the dynasty was a shepherd, Abu Shujā Badh ibn Dustak. He left his cattle, took up arms and became a valiant chief of war, obtaining popularity. When a member of the Buyid dynasty, Adud al-Dawla, who ruled Iraq, died in 983, Badh took Mayyāfāriqīn. He also conquered Diyarbakır, as well as a variety of urban sites on the northern shores of Lake Van.

During the rebellion of Bardas Phokas the Younger in the Byzantine Empire, Bādh took advantage of the chaotic political situation to conquer the plain of Mush in Taron, an Armenian princedom annexed by the Byzantine Empire in 966.[20]

Abu Ali Al-Hasan ibn Marwān

Elias of Nisibis, a Syriac chronicler, discussed the life of Abu ‘Ali al-Hasan. After the death of his uncle Badh, the elder son of Marwan came back to Hisn-Kayfa, and married the widow of the old warrior chief. He fought the last Hamdanids, confused them and retook all the fortresses. Elias related the tragic end of this prince who was killed in Amid (Diyarbakır) in 997[21] by rebellious inhabitants. His brother Abu Mansur Sa’id succeeded him under the name of Mumahhid al-Dawla. In 992, after Badh's death and a series of Byzantine punitive raids around Lake Van, Emperor Basil II (r. 976–1025) was able to negotiate a lasting peace with the Kurdish emirate.

Mumahhid al-Dawla Sa'id

 
Merwanid Said, 391 AH (ca. 1000 AD), Silvan, Diyarbakır, Turkey

Mumahhid, a skilful diplomat, made use of the Byzantines' ambitions. The relations of this prince with Emperor Basil II were quite friendly. When Basil learnt of the murder of the Georgian potentate David III of Tao, who had left his kingdom to the Byzantine Empire by testament, he stopped the campaign that he had begun in Syria to ensure the Arabian emirs' obedience and crossed the Euphrates. He annexed David's state, received Mumahhid al-Dawla with honours and made peace with him. Mumahhid al-Dawla took advantage of the peace to restore the walls of his capital Maïpherqat (Mayyafariqin), where an inscription still commemorates this event.

In 1000 when Basil II travelled from Cilicia to the lands of David III Kuropalates (Akhlat and Manzikert), Mumahhid al-Dawla came to offer his submission to the emperor and in return he received the high rank of magistros and doux of the East.[22]

Sharwin ibn Muhammad, usurper

In 1010, Mumahhid al-Dawla was assassinated by his ghulam, Sharwin ibn Muhammad, who assumed rulership. He legitimized his rule with the ancient rule that whoever kills the ruler becomes himself the successor. However this archaic rule and Sharwin's rule were soon contested, and Sharwin was overthrown. Coins are known from his brief reign.

Nasr al-Dawla Ahmad ibn Marwan

 
Medieval miniature depicting Marwanid assault on Byzantine Edessa in 1032
 
Inscription with Nasr al-Dawla's name, 405 AH (ca. 1014 AD), Silvan, Diyarbakır, Turkey
 
Inscription with Nasr al-Dawla's name, 416 AH (ca. 1025 AD), Silvan, Diyarbakır, Turkey

Nasr al-Dawla was the third son of Marwan to ascend the throne. A clever politician, he skilfully navigated between the surrounding great powers: the Buyid emir Sultan al-Dawla, the Fatimid caliph of Egypt al-Hakim and Basil II. Elias of Nisibis has written that Nasr al-Dawla Ahmad ibn Marwan, "the victorious emir", subdued Ibn Dimne, his vassal in Diyarbakır, in 1011. He signed with the Byzantine Empire a pact of mutual non-aggression, but violated it once or twice. The renown of this Kurdish Muslim prince grew so much that the inhabitants of al-Ruha (Edessa, present-day Sanli Urfa), at the west, called him to free them from an Arab chief. Nasr al-Dawla took the city of Edessa in 1026, and added it to his possessions. This event has been reported by the famous western Syriac author Bar Hebraeus (1226–1286). So Nasr al-Dawla annexed Edessa, but the city was retaken by the Byzantine general George Maniakes in 1031. In 1032 he sent an army of 5000 horsemen, under the command of his general Bal, to re-take the town from Arab tribes supported by Byzantium. The Kurdish commander Bal took the city and killed the Arab tribal chief, then he wrote to his lord, asking for reinforcements, "if you want to save your Lordship on Kertastan (Kurdistan)". Al-Ruha was finally captured again by Byzantines in 1033.[9]

 
Inscription with Nasr al-Dawla's name, 410 AH (ca. 1019 AD), Silvan, Diyarbakır, Turkey

The long rule of Nasr al-Dawla represented the apogee of Marwanid power. He built a new citadel on a hill of Mayyafariqin where the Church of the Virgin stood, and also constructed bridges and public baths, and restored the observatory. Some libraries were established in the mosques of Mayyafarikin and Amid. He invited well-known scholars, historians and poets to his royal court, among them Ibn al-Athir, Abd Allah al-Kazaruni, and al-Tihami. He sheltered political refugees such as the future Abbasid caliph al-Muqtadi (1075–1099). In 1054 he had to acknowledge Toghrul Beg the Seljuq as his own liege, who ruled the largest part of the Jazira, but he kept his territories. This fine period of peace and good feelings between Kurds and Syriacs was rich in cultural creations. It enjoyed extensive trade, vibrant arts and crafts, and an impressive history. Nasr al-Dawla left monumental inscriptions in Diyarbakır that show still now the artistic brightness of his reign.

Twilight

 
Inscription with Nizam al-Dawla's name, 464 AH (ca. 1072 AD), Amida, Diyarbakır, Turkey

After Nasr al-Dawla's death, the Marwanids' power declined. His second son, Nizam, succeeded him and ruled until 1079, then followed his son Nasir al-Dawla Mansur. The end of the Marwanid dynasty came about by treason. Ibn Jahir, a former vizier, left the Diyar Bakr and went to Baghdad. There, he convinced the Seljuq sultan Malik Shah I (1072–1092), a grand-nephew of Toghrul Beg, and the famous vizier Nizam al-Mulk, to allow him to assault Mayyafarikin. When the city was taken, Ibn Jahir took the Marwanids' great treasures for himself. Henceforth, the Diyar Bakr fell almost entirely under the direct rule of the Seljuks. The last emir, Nasir al-Dawla Mansur, kept only the city of Jazirat Ibn ‘Umar (present-day Cizre in south-eastern Turkey). The roots of the Badikan tribe go back to Badh ibn dustak the founder of the Marwanids. This tribe continues its existence in the provinces of Muş, Silvan and Diyarbakır in Turkey.[23] The Malabadi Bridge in Silvan, Diyarbakır takes its name from Bad, the founder of the Marvanids. Malabadi means (house of Bad) in Kurdish.[24]

List of Marwanid rulers

  1. Abu Shujā' Badh ibn Dustak (983/990–991)
  2. Al-Hasan ibn Marwān (991–997)
  3. Mumahhid al-Dawla Sa’īd (997–1010)
  4. Sharwin ibn Muhammad (1010), usurper
  5. Nasr al-Dawla Ahmad ibn Marwān (1011–1061)
  6. Nizām al-Dawla Nasr (1061–1079)
  7. Nasir al-Dawla Mansur (1079–1085)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Öpengin 2021, p. 612.
  2. ^ Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East "In the West were the Marwanids, based at Diyarbakr.."
  3. ^ a b Bosworth, C.E. (19 July 2011). "AḴLĀṬ". Iranica Online. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  4. ^ Jwaideh, Wadie (2006). The Kurdish National Movement: Its Origins and Development. Syracuse University Press. p. 15. ISBN 9780815630937.
  5. ^ a b c Tekin, Rahimi (2000). Ahlat tarihi. Osmanlı Araştırmaları Vakfı. p. 35. ISBN 9789757268307.
  6. ^ "Nusaybin". İslam Ansiklopedisi. 33. Türk Diyanet Vakfı. 2007. pp. 269–270.
  7. ^ Jwaideh, Wadie (2006). The Kurdish National Movement: Its Origins and Development. Syracuse University Press. p. 15. ISBN 9780815630937.
  8. ^ az, Arafat (2020). "Mervânî Devleti'nin Kurucusu Bâd b. Dostık". Turkish Studies (in Turkish). 15 (2): 724-726.
  9. ^ a b "ŞANLIURFA - TDV İslâm Ansiklopedisi".
  10. ^ History, University of Minnesota Center for Early Modern (2000-09-25). City Walls: The Urban Enceinte in Global Perspective. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-65221-6.
  11. ^ Ashtiany, Julia; Bray, Julia; Smith, Gerald Rex; Johnstone, T. M.; Latham, J. D.; Serjeant, R. B.; Menocal, María Rosa; Cambridge, University of; Scheindlin, Raymond P. (1990-03-30). Abbasid Belles Lettres. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-24016-1.
  12. ^ Mulder, Stephennie (2019-08-06). Shrines of the 'Alids in Medieval Syria: Sunnis, Shi'is and the Architecture of Coexistence. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-1-4744-7116-9.
  13. ^ El-Azhari, Taef (2016). Zengi and the Muslim Response to the Crusades: The Politics of Jihad. Routledge. p. 42. ISBN 9781317589396.
  14. ^ Peacock, Andrew C. S. (2010). Early Seljūq History: A New Interpretation. Routledge. p. 154. ISBN 9780415548533.
  15. ^ Payaslian, Simon (2007). The history of Armenia: from the origins to the present. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 69. ISBN 9780230600645.
  16. ^ Ashtiany, J. (1990). Abbasid Belles Lettres. Cambridge University Press. p. 15. ISBN 9780521240161.
  17. ^ Ghazarian, L. (2006). "Les kurdes Ardalân entre la Perse et l'Empire ottoman". Iran and the Caucasus. 10: 312–314. doi:10.1163/157338406780345907.
  18. ^ Tilman, Nagle (15 December 1990). "Buyids". Iranica Online. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  19. ^ Bosworth 1996, p. 89.
  20. ^ Catherine Holmes, Basil II And the Governance of Empire, 976-1025, (Oxford University Press, 2005), 309.
  21. ^ Marwanids, Carole Hillenbrand, The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Vol. VI, ed. C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, B.Lewis and C. Pellat, (Brill, 1991), 626.
  22. ^ J. C. Cheynet, Basil II and Asia Minor, pp.71-108 in Byzantium in the Year 1000 edited by Paul Magdalino, International Congress of Historical Sciences, 284 pp., Brill Publishers, 2003, ISBN 90-04-12097-1, p.98
  23. ^ "Mervani Kürt beyliğinin hazin sonu". 23 December 2019.
  24. ^ "Malabadi Köprüsü yıllara meydan okuyor".

Sources

  • Bosworth, C.E (1996). The New Islamic Dynasties. Columbia University Press. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-231-10714-3.
  • Bar Hebraeus, Chronique universelle, Mukhtassar al-Duwal, Beirut.
  • Chronography of Elias bar Shinaya, Metropolitan of Nisibe, edited and translated into French by L .J. Delaporte, Paris, 1910.
  • al-Fāriqī, Ahmad b. Yûsuf b. `Alī b. al-Azraq, Tārīkh al-fāriqī (ed. Badawī `Abd al-Latīf `Awwad). Beirut: Dār al-Kitāb al-Lubnānī, 1984. English summary by H. F. Amedroz, "The Marwanid dynasty at Mayyafariqin in the tenth and eleventh centuries AD", Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 1903, pp. 123–154.
  • Öpengin, Ergin (2021). "The History of Kurdish and the Development of Literary Kurmanji". In Bozarslan, Hamit; Gunes, Cengiz; Yadirgi, Veli (eds.). The Cambridge History of the Kurds. Cambridge University Press. ..Kurdish dynasties were formed (cf. James, 2006, 2007: 110–13; Ripper, 2012: 21), such as the Hasanwayhids, Rawadids (cf. Minorsky, 1953), Ayyubids and Marwanids. Among these, the Marwanid dynasty (983–1085) especially enjoyed considerable economic and cultural prosperity (Ripper, 2012: 21). However, Kurdish, the mother tongue of the rulers of the dynasty, does not seem to have enjoyed any visibility in administration nor in the cultural life at the court. Thus, although the qasida poetry was thriving in the Marwanid court and produced by poets of Kurdish and other origins, the language of its composition and performance is reported to be exclusively Arabic (cf. James, 2007:112; Ripper, 2012: 507–28), while the number of coins from their reign is also in Arabic (cf. Heidemann, 1997–1998).

Further reading

  1. Blaum, P., "A History of the Kurdish Marwanid Dynasty (983-1085), Part I", Kurdish Studies: An International Journal, Vol.5, No.1-2, Spring/Fall 1992, pp. 54–68.
  2. Blaum, P., "A History of the Kurdish Marwanid Dynasty (983-1085), Part II", Kurdish Studies: An International Journal, Vol.6, No.1-2, Fall 1993, pp. 40–65.
  3. Ripper, Thomas. Die Marwāniden von Diyār Bakr. Eine kurdische Dynastie im islamischen Mittelalter. Würzburg: Ergon Verlag, 2000.

External links

  • Waqf inscription from Nasr al-Dawla; Jerusalem
  • , by Ephrem-Isa Yousif.
  • Basil II, in An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors, by Catherine Holmes, 2003.

marwanids, diyar, bakr, this, article, about, kurdish, dynasty, branch, umayyad, dynasty, umayyad, caliphate, marwanids, dustakids, 1085, kurdish, میرنشینی, مەروانی, were, kurdish, sunni, muslim, dynasty, diyar, bakr, region, upper, mesopotamia, present, north. This article is about the Kurdish dynasty For the branch of the Umayyad dynasty see Umayyad Caliphate The Marwanids or Dustakids 983 990 1085 Kurdish میرنشینی مەروانی were a Kurdish Sunni Muslim dynasty in the Diyar Bakr region of Upper Mesopotamia present day northern Iraq southeastern Turkey and Armenia centered on the city of Amid Diyarbakir Marwanid dynasty983 990 1085CapitalAmidSpoken languagesKurdish mother tongue 1 Arabic poetry numismatics 1 ReligionSunni Islam official GovernmentEmirateHistory Established983 990 Disestablished1085Preceded by Succeeded byBuyid dynastyHamdanid dynastyBagratid Armenia Seljuk Empire Contents 1 Territory 2 History 2 1 Origins 2 2 Abu Ali Al Hasan ibn Marwan 2 3 Mumahhid al Dawla Sa id 2 4 Sharwin ibn Muhammad usurper 2 5 Nasr al Dawla Ahmad ibn Marwan 2 6 Twilight 3 List of Marwanid rulers 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksTerritory EditThe Marwanid realm in the Diyar Bakr region of Upper Mesopotamia present day northern Iraq southeastern Turkey and Armenia centered on the city of Amid Diyarbakir 2 They also ruled over Akhlat 3 Bitlis 4 Manzikert 5 Nisibis 6 Ercis 5 Muradiye 5 Siirt 7 Cizre Hasankayf and temporarily ruled over Mosul 8 and Edessa 9 History EditOrigins Edit According to most academic sources 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 the Marwanids were a Kurdish dynasty The Encyclopaedia of Iran considers them as an Arab dynasty in one article 18 and refers to them as a Kurdish dynasty in another article 3 The Marwanids were Sunni Muslims 19 The founder of the dynasty was a shepherd Abu Shuja Badh ibn Dustak He left his cattle took up arms and became a valiant chief of war obtaining popularity When a member of the Buyid dynasty Adud al Dawla who ruled Iraq died in 983 Badh took Mayyafariqin He also conquered Diyarbakir as well as a variety of urban sites on the northern shores of Lake Van During the rebellion of Bardas Phokas the Younger in the Byzantine Empire Badh took advantage of the chaotic political situation to conquer the plain of Mush in Taron an Armenian princedom annexed by the Byzantine Empire in 966 20 Abu Ali Al Hasan ibn Marwan Edit Elias of Nisibis a Syriac chronicler discussed the life of Abu Ali al Hasan After the death of his uncle Badh the elder son of Marwan came back to Hisn Kayfa and married the widow of the old warrior chief He fought the last Hamdanids confused them and retook all the fortresses Elias related the tragic end of this prince who was killed in Amid Diyarbakir in 997 21 by rebellious inhabitants His brother Abu Mansur Sa id succeeded him under the name of Mumahhid al Dawla In 992 after Badh s death and a series of Byzantine punitive raids around Lake Van Emperor Basil II r 976 1025 was able to negotiate a lasting peace with the Kurdish emirate Mumahhid al Dawla Sa id Edit This section may be confusing or unclear to readers Please help clarify the section There might be a discussion about this on the talk page June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Merwanid Said 391 AH ca 1000 AD Silvan Diyarbakir Turkey Mumahhid a skilful diplomat made use of the Byzantines ambitions The relations of this prince with Emperor Basil II were quite friendly When Basil learnt of the murder of the Georgian potentate David III of Tao who had left his kingdom to the Byzantine Empire by testament he stopped the campaign that he had begun in Syria to ensure the Arabian emirs obedience and crossed the Euphrates He annexed David s state received Mumahhid al Dawla with honours and made peace with him Mumahhid al Dawla took advantage of the peace to restore the walls of his capital Maipherqat Mayyafariqin where an inscription still commemorates this event In 1000 when Basil II travelled from Cilicia to the lands of David III Kuropalates Akhlat and Manzikert Mumahhid al Dawla came to offer his submission to the emperor and in return he received the high rank of magistros and doux of the East 22 Sharwin ibn Muhammad usurper Edit In 1010 Mumahhid al Dawla was assassinated by his ghulam Sharwin ibn Muhammad who assumed rulership He legitimized his rule with the ancient rule that whoever kills the ruler becomes himself the successor However this archaic rule and Sharwin s rule were soon contested and Sharwin was overthrown Coins are known from his brief reign Nasr al Dawla Ahmad ibn Marwan Edit Medieval miniature depicting Marwanid assault on Byzantine Edessa in 1032 Inscription with Nasr al Dawla s name 405 AH ca 1014 AD Silvan Diyarbakir Turkey Inscription with Nasr al Dawla s name 416 AH ca 1025 AD Silvan Diyarbakir Turkey Nasr al Dawla was the third son of Marwan to ascend the throne A clever politician he skilfully navigated between the surrounding great powers the Buyid emir Sultan al Dawla the Fatimid caliph of Egypt al Hakim and Basil II Elias of Nisibis has written that Nasr al Dawla Ahmad ibn Marwan the victorious emir subdued Ibn Dimne his vassal in Diyarbakir in 1011 He signed with the Byzantine Empire a pact of mutual non aggression but violated it once or twice The renown of this Kurdish Muslim prince grew so much that the inhabitants of al Ruha Edessa present day Sanli Urfa at the west called him to free them from an Arab chief Nasr al Dawla took the city of Edessa in 1026 and added it to his possessions This event has been reported by the famous western Syriac author Bar Hebraeus 1226 1286 So Nasr al Dawla annexed Edessa but the city was retaken by the Byzantine general George Maniakes in 1031 In 1032 he sent an army of 5000 horsemen under the command of his general Bal to re take the town from Arab tribes supported by Byzantium The Kurdish commander Bal took the city and killed the Arab tribal chief then he wrote to his lord asking for reinforcements if you want to save your Lordship on Kertastan Kurdistan Al Ruha was finally captured again by Byzantines in 1033 9 Inscription with Nasr al Dawla s name 410 AH ca 1019 AD Silvan Diyarbakir Turkey The long rule of Nasr al Dawla represented the apogee of Marwanid power He built a new citadel on a hill of Mayyafariqin where the Church of the Virgin stood and also constructed bridges and public baths and restored the observatory Some libraries were established in the mosques of Mayyafarikin and Amid He invited well known scholars historians and poets to his royal court among them Ibn al Athir Abd Allah al Kazaruni and al Tihami He sheltered political refugees such as the future Abbasid caliph al Muqtadi 1075 1099 In 1054 he had to acknowledge Toghrul Beg the Seljuq as his own liege who ruled the largest part of the Jazira but he kept his territories This fine period of peace and good feelings between Kurds and Syriacs was rich in cultural creations It enjoyed extensive trade vibrant arts and crafts and an impressive history Nasr al Dawla left monumental inscriptions in Diyarbakir that show still now the artistic brightness of his reign Twilight Edit Inscription with Nizam al Dawla s name 464 AH ca 1072 AD Amida Diyarbakir Turkey After Nasr al Dawla s death the Marwanids power declined His second son Nizam succeeded him and ruled until 1079 then followed his son Nasir al Dawla Mansur The end of the Marwanid dynasty came about by treason Ibn Jahir a former vizier left the Diyar Bakr and went to Baghdad There he convinced the Seljuq sultan Malik Shah I 1072 1092 a grand nephew of Toghrul Beg and the famous vizier Nizam al Mulk to allow him to assault Mayyafarikin When the city was taken Ibn Jahir took the Marwanids great treasures for himself Henceforth the Diyar Bakr fell almost entirely under the direct rule of the Seljuks The last emir Nasir al Dawla Mansur kept only the city of Jazirat Ibn Umar present day Cizre in south eastern Turkey The roots of the Badikan tribe go back to Badh ibn dustak the founder of the Marwanids This tribe continues its existence in the provinces of Mus Silvan and Diyarbakir in Turkey 23 The Malabadi Bridge in Silvan Diyarbakir takes its name from Bad the founder of the Marvanids Malabadi means house of Bad in Kurdish 24 List of Marwanid rulers EditAbu Shuja Badh ibn Dustak 983 990 991 Al Hasan ibn Marwan 991 997 Mumahhid al Dawla Sa id 997 1010 Sharwin ibn Muhammad 1010 usurper Nasr al Dawla Ahmad ibn Marwan 1011 1061 Nizam al Dawla Nasr 1061 1079 Nasir al Dawla Mansur 1079 1085 See also EditDicle Bridge a ten arch bridge built in 1065 List of Kurdish dynastiesReferences Edit a b Opengin 2021 p 612 Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East In the West were the Marwanids based at Diyarbakr a b Bosworth C E 19 July 2011 AḴLAṬ Iranica Online Retrieved 30 May 2017 Jwaideh Wadie 2006 The Kurdish National Movement Its Origins and Development Syracuse University Press p 15 ISBN 9780815630937 a b c Tekin Rahimi 2000 Ahlat tarihi Osmanli Arastirmalari Vakfi p 35 ISBN 9789757268307 Nusaybin Islam Ansiklopedisi 33 Turk Diyanet Vakfi 2007 pp 269 270 Jwaideh Wadie 2006 The Kurdish National Movement Its Origins and Development Syracuse University Press p 15 ISBN 9780815630937 az Arafat 2020 Mervani Devleti nin Kurucusu Bad b Dostik Turkish Studies in Turkish 15 2 724 726 a b SANLIURFA TDV Islam Ansiklopedisi History University of Minnesota Center for Early Modern 2000 09 25 City Walls The Urban Enceinte in Global Perspective Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 65221 6 Ashtiany Julia Bray Julia Smith Gerald Rex Johnstone T M Latham J D Serjeant R B Menocal Maria Rosa Cambridge University of Scheindlin Raymond P 1990 03 30 Abbasid Belles Lettres Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 24016 1 Mulder Stephennie 2019 08 06 Shrines of the Alids in Medieval Syria Sunnis Shi is and the Architecture of Coexistence Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 1 4744 7116 9 El Azhari Taef 2016 Zengi and the Muslim Response to the Crusades The Politics of Jihad Routledge p 42 ISBN 9781317589396 Peacock Andrew C S 2010 Early Seljuq History A New Interpretation Routledge p 154 ISBN 9780415548533 Payaslian Simon 2007 The history of Armenia from the origins to the present Palgrave Macmillan p 69 ISBN 9780230600645 Ashtiany J 1990 Abbasid Belles Lettres Cambridge University Press p 15 ISBN 9780521240161 Ghazarian L 2006 Les kurdes Ardalan entre la Perse et l Empire ottoman Iran and the Caucasus 10 312 314 doi 10 1163 157338406780345907 Tilman Nagle 15 December 1990 Buyids Iranica Online Retrieved 30 May 2017 Bosworth 1996 p 89 Catherine Holmes Basil II And the Governance of Empire 976 1025 Oxford University Press 2005 309 Marwanids Carole Hillenbrand The Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol VI ed C E Bosworth E van Donzel B Lewis and C Pellat Brill 1991 626 J C Cheynet Basil II and Asia Minor pp 71 108 in Byzantium in the Year 1000 edited by Paul Magdalino International Congress of Historical Sciences 284 pp Brill Publishers 2003 ISBN 90 04 12097 1 p 98 Mervani Kurt beyliginin hazin sonu 23 December 2019 Malabadi Koprusu yillara meydan okuyor Sources EditBosworth C E 1996 The New Islamic Dynasties Columbia University Press p 89 ISBN 978 0 231 10714 3 Bar Hebraeus Chronique universelle Mukhtassar al Duwal Beirut Chronography of Elias bar Shinaya Metropolitan of Nisibe edited and translated into French by L J Delaporte Paris 1910 al Fariqi Ahmad b Yusuf b Ali b al Azraq Tarikh al fariqi ed Badawi Abd al Latif Awwad Beirut Dar al Kitab al Lubnani 1984 English summary by H F Amedroz The Marwanid dynasty at Mayyafariqin in the tenth and eleventh centuries AD Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 1903 pp 123 154 Opengin Ergin 2021 The History of Kurdish and the Development of Literary Kurmanji In Bozarslan Hamit Gunes Cengiz Yadirgi Veli eds The Cambridge History of the Kurds Cambridge University Press Kurdish dynasties were formed cf James 2006 2007 110 13 Ripper 2012 21 such as the Hasanwayhids Rawadids cf Minorsky 1953 Ayyubids and Marwanids Among these the Marwanid dynasty 983 1085 especially enjoyed considerable economic and cultural prosperity Ripper 2012 21 However Kurdish the mother tongue of the rulers of the dynasty does not seem to have enjoyed any visibility in administration nor in the cultural life at the court Thus although the qasida poetry was thriving in the Marwanid court and produced by poets of Kurdish and other origins the language of its composition and performance is reported to be exclusively Arabic cf James 2007 112 Ripper 2012 507 28 while the number of coins from their reign is also in Arabic cf Heidemann 1997 1998 Further reading EditBlaum P A History of the Kurdish Marwanid Dynasty 983 1085 Part I Kurdish Studies An International Journal Vol 5 No 1 2 Spring Fall 1992 pp 54 68 Blaum P A History of the Kurdish Marwanid Dynasty 983 1085 Part II Kurdish Studies An International Journal Vol 6 No 1 2 Fall 1993 pp 40 65 Ripper Thomas Die Marwaniden von Diyar Bakr Eine kurdische Dynastie im islamischen Mittelalter Wurzburg Ergon Verlag 2000 Stefan Heidemann A New Ruler of the Marwanid Emirate in 401 1010 and Further Considerations on the Legitimizing Power of Regicide In Aram 9 10 1997 8 pp 599 615 External links EditWaqf inscription from Nasr al Dawla Jerusalem The Kurdish Marwanid princes and Syriac scholars by Ephrem Isa Yousif The Kurdish Marwanid princes and Syriac scholars Basil II in An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors by Catherine Holmes 2003 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marwanids Diyar Bakr amp oldid 1144497897, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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