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Tala'i ibn Ruzzik

Tala'i ibn Ruzzik (Arabic: طلائع ﺑﻦ ﺭﺯﻳﻚ, romanizedṬalāʾīʿ ibn Ruzzīk, with his full titles and surnames Abū'l-Gharāt Fāris al-Muslimīn al-Malik al-Ṣāliḥ Ṭalāʾīʿ ibn Ruzzīk al-Ghassānī al-Armanī) was a military commander and official of the Fatimid Caliphate, serving as its vizier from 1154 until his assassination in 1161, when he was succeeded by his son, Ruzzik ibn Tala'i. He is generally acknowledged as the last of the powerful and capable viziers of the Fatimid state. During his tenure the Fatimid Caliphate regained a measure of stability, and was once again able to project its power abroad and pursue its political interests in the Eastern Mediterranean.

Tala'i ibn Ruzzik
Died10 September 1161
NationalityFatimid Caliphate
Occupation(s)Military commander, governor, vizier
Years activebefore 1153 – 1161

Early life and career edit

Although his nisbah of al-Ghassānī implies an origin form the Arab tribe of the Ghassanids, most authors consider Tala'i ibn Ruzzik an Armenian (whence the surname al-Armanī), and indicate that his father was among those Armenians who came to Egypt under the rule of the powerful Armenian vizier Badr al-Jamali and his son al-Afdal Shahanshah. Indeed, some writers thought that he was born in Armenia.[1] Born at the beginning of the 12th century,[2] at first Ibn Ruzzik appears to have pursued a career in Iraq, where he also converted to Twelver Shi'ism, as evidenced by the correspondence he maintained thereafter with Mosul, Kufa, and Hillah.[1]

At an unknown point, he joined the Fatimid army. His career there is unknown, but by 1143/4 he was governor of al-Buhayra, when he subdued a rebellion of the Lawata Berbers. Later he participated in the revolt of al-Adil ibn al-Sallar and his stepson Abbas ibn Abi al-Futuh against the vizier Ibn Masal (winter 1149/50), winning an important victory for the rebels.[1] He then held the governorships of Aswan and of Qus (the capital of Upper Egypt). By 1154, he was governor of either Asyut in Upper Egypt, Ashmunayn and al-Bahnasa, or of Munyat Bani al-Khasib.[1] In April of that year, Abbas ibn Abi al-Futuh and his son Nasr, who had already assassinated Ibn al-Sallar, murdered Caliph al-Zafir. Abbas placed the five-year-old al-Fa'iz on the throne and executed two of al-Zafir's brothers, whom he accused of responsibility for al-Zafir's assassination.[1][3] Thereupon the women of the palace, led by al-Zafir's sister Sitt al-Qusur, reportedly cut off their hair and sent it to Ibn Ruzzik, requesting of him to save the dynasty. Ibn Ruzzik mobilized his forces—the holders of the iqṭāʿ fiefs and allied Arab and Berber tribes—and marched on Cairo, where Abbas' attempts to organize resistance foundered on popular opposition to his regime. As Ibn Ruzzik appeared before the city, Abbas, his son, and their chief supporters escaped the city towards Syria. Sitt al-Qusur sent word of their escape to the Crusaders of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, however, and Abbas was killed, while Nasr was taken captive and sent back to Egypt, where he was executed by the women of the palace.[1][3][4] The treasure of the palace, however, which Abbas had loaded on a train of 600 mules and camels and taken with him, was kept by the Crusaders.[5]

Vizierate edit

Domestic policies edit

Thus, in July 1154, Ibn Ruzzik entered Cairo in triumph. The symbols he chose during his entry carried ominous overtones for the future of the Fatimid dynasty: eschewing Fatimid white, both the standards of his army, and Ibn Ruzzik's own clothes, were black, the colour of the Fatimids' arch-rivals, the Abbasids.[6] He then installed himself in the Dar al-Ma'mun palace, and began a purge of the officials and their families who had collaborated with Abbas. Those found guilty were executed or sent to exile, while a few managed to escape to Yemen.[7] This left Ibn Ruzzik, now vizier, as the undisputed ruler of the country; the underage Caliph al-Fa'iz was reduced to a mere figurehead and lived under virtual house arrest.[3] He was the first Fatimid vizier to assume the honorific laqab of al-Malik ("king"); according to Thierry Bianquis, this was probably in imitation of the earlier Buyid dynasty, who were likewise Imamis and who exercised a similar role as the guardians of, and de facto rulers instead of, the Abbasid caliphs. However, it was also a title used by the other great contemporary Muslim ruler, Nur al-Din Zengi of Syria.[7]

Himself well educated in high Arabic culture and a capable poet, Ibn Ruzzik liked to surround himself with scholars, among whom the most notable were the qāḍī al-Muhadhdhab al-Hasan ibn Ali ibn al-Zubayr (from Aswan), and the kātib al-Jalis al-Makin ibn al-Hubab, who directed the chancery (dīwān al-inshāʾ).[7] Abbas' flight with the state treasure left a problematic financial situation, but Ibn Ruzzik proved an energetic and capable administrator, who paid close attention to financial matters: he not only balanced the economy, but also amassed a huge personal property through confiscations and speculation in cereals.[7] Much of his personal wealth was used to endow pious establishments, including the large Husayn Mosque outside the Bab Zuwayla gate, intended to house a precious relic, the head of Husayn ibn Ali. This was the last major monument built under the Fatimids in Cairo, and was fortified according to the style of Upper Egypt.[7]

Having served long in Upper Egypt, Ibn Ruzzik maintained close ties to it; upon becoming vizier, he financed the reconstruction of the main mosque at Qus. The area now became his main powerbase: a wealthy region which controlled access to the interior of the African continent, as well as the commerce routes linking Egypt with Arabia—including the symbolically important hajj routes and the wheat supply for Mecca and Medina— and the Indian Ocean.[1] The support of the governor of Qus, Nasir al-Dawla Yaqut, was important in suppressing the rebellion of the governor of Damietta, al-Ahwad ibn Tamim in 1156, but Yaqut himself plotted an uprising in 1157, in consultation with one of the Caliphs aunts, who resented Ibn Ruzzik's interference in palace affairs. Yaqut was arrested in Cairo and replaced with Izz al-Din Tarkhan, followed by Shawar, one of Ibn Ruzzik's pages (and future vizier).[7]

Conflict with the Crusaders edit

 
Political map of the Levant in c. 1165

In spring 1154, a Crusader fleet from the Kingdom of Sicily raided the port city of Tinnis with devastating effect. Newly come to power in Cairo, Ibn Ruzzik initially sought to placate the Crusaders by paying them tribute in exchange for a truce. To this end, he planned to raise new taxes on the iqṭāʿ fiefs of his officers. The latter were opposed to the idea, and instead launched a raid of their own against the Crusader port of Tyre. The operation, bold and unorthodox, was successful, and scuppered Ibn Ruzzik's plans.[2][7]

In April 1154, Nur al-Din Zengi, the Muslim ruler of northern Syria, succeeded in capturing Damascus. Encouraged by this event, Ibn Ruzzik abandoned his negotiations with the Crusaders and renewed efforts to form a league between Egypt and Nur al-Din, which had already been attempted by Ibn al-Sallar in 1150.[8] In 1158, Ibn Ruzzik sent the ḥādjib Mahmud al-Muwallad to Nur al-Din, proposing an alliance and joint operations against the Crusader principalities,[7] while an army under Dirgham, the deputy chamberlain of the palace (nāʾib al-Bāb), was dispatched to raid into Palestine. The army scored some successes at Gaza and raided in Palestine up to beyond the Jordan River, while the Fatimid fleet raided against Beirut.[2][7] These victories emboldened Ibn Ruzzik, who wrote of them to Nur al-Din, exhorting him to join with Egypt in holy war against the Crusaders. He also tried to enlist Usama ibn Munqidh, a former Fatimid official who had gained Nur al-Din's favour, in support of this cause, but in vain: Usama refused to take sides, and al-Muwallad's embassy failed.[9]

These operations were judged as ineffective both by Arab chroniclers and modern historians, while the reasons behind Nur al-Din's passivity have been debated.[7] Nevertheless, these operations forced the other powers of the eastern Mediterranean to once again take account of Fatimid power. In the aftermath of the raid, a mission from the Byzantine Empire arrived at Cairo, asking for assistance against the Kingdom of Sicily. In reply, the brother of the ruler of Cyprus, who had been taken prisoner, was sent to the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Komnenos.[7] Soon after, envoys from the Crusader realms arrived to arrange a truce, while the Byzantines restored their relations with Nur al-Din.[7] At the same time, Ibn Ruzzik tok care to fortify the city of Bilbays, north of Cairo, to block any army invading the country from the north.[10]

Death and succession edit

On 23 July 1160, Caliph al-Fa'iz died of illness. Ibn Ruzzik at first considered raising an adult member of the Fatimid clan to the caliphate, but in the end settled on the nine-year-old al-Adid, whose father was one of the brothers of al-Zafir executed by Abbas on the very day al-Fa'iz had been raised to the throne.[10] With a minor once again on the throne, Ibn Ruzzik's position was secure, and was strengthened further when he forced the young caliph to marry his daughter.[10]

However, these moves, coupled with Ibn Ruzzik's patronage of Twelver Shi'ism, alarmed the royal family. Sitt al-Qusur paid black soldiers, who attacked Ibn Ruzzik on 10 September 1161 in the hallway of his palace.[10][11] Mortally wounded, Ibn Ruzzik nevertheless survived long enough to secure from the Caliph the recognition of his son, Ruzzik ibn Tala'i, as his successor, as well as the death of Sitt al-Qusur and the three men who had attacked him.[10] On his deathbed, he reportedly confided to his son his three regrets: the construction of the Husayn Mosque outside the walls, which could be used to attack Cairo; that he did not have the opportunity to use Bilbays as a base against the Crusaders, despite the expenses lavished on it; and having put Shawar ibn Mujir al-Sa'di in the powerful position of governor of Upper Egypt, from where he now posed a threat to his own power.[10] His premonition proved true: in 1162, Shawar chased Ibn Tala'i from Cairo, and became the de facto ruler of Egypt.[11] In 1174, one of his descendants took part in an abortive large-scale conspiracy to overthrow Saladin and restore the Fatimids, who had been deposed three years previously, to power.[12]

Assessment edit

Muslim chroniclers were divided in their assessment of Ibn Ruzzik: the Egyptian historian Ibn Zafir focused on his violent behaviour and greed, but the 13th-century polymath Ibn Sa'id al-Maghribi considered him among the most successful Fatimid viziers, along the likes of Ibn Killis or al-Afdal Shahanshah.[10] This assessment is largely shared by modern historians; Thierry Bianquis describes him as "the last great man of the Fāṭimid state, who wanted to reconstruct a strong Egypt, which could carry out its own foreign policies".[10]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Bianquis 2000, p. 149.
  2. ^ a b c Brett 2007, p. 22.
  3. ^ a b c Daftary 1990, p. 250.
  4. ^ Lev 1991, p. 61.
  5. ^ Bianquis 2000, pp. 149, 150.
  6. ^ Bianquis 2000, pp. 149–150.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Bianquis 2000, p. 150.
  8. ^ Brett 2007, p. 21.
  9. ^ Brett 2007, pp. 21–24.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Bianquis 2000, p. 151.
  11. ^ a b Lev 1991, p. 62.
  12. ^ Daftary 1990, pp. 253–254.

Sources edit

  • Bianquis, Thierry (2000). "Ṭalāʾiʿ b. Ruzzīk". In Bearman, P. J.; Bianquis, Th.; Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E. & Heinrichs, W. P. (eds.). The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Volume X: T–U. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 149–151. doi:10.1163/1573-3912_islam_SIM_7356. ISBN 978-90-04-11211-7.
  • Brett, Michael (2007). "The Fatimids and the Counter-Crusade, 1099–1171". In Vermeulen, Urbain; D'Hulster, K. (eds.). Egypt and Syria in the Fāṭimid, Ayyūbid and Mamlūk Eras: Proceedings of the 11th, 12th and 13th International Colloquium organised at the Katholieke Universiteit in Leuven in May 2002, 2003 and 2004. Leuven. pp. 15–26.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Daftary, Farhad (1990). The Ismāʿı̄lı̄s: Their History and Doctrines. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-37019-6.
  • Lev, Yaacov (1991). State and Society in Fatimid Egypt. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 9789004093447.
  • Sanders, Paula A. (1998). "The Fatimid State, 969–1171". In Petry, Carl F. (ed.). The Cambridge History of Egypt, Volume 1: Islamic Egypt, 640–1517. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 151–174. ISBN 0-521-47137-0.
Preceded by Vizier of the Fatimid Caliphate
1154–1161
Succeeded by

tala, ruzzik, arabic, طلائع, ﺑﻦ, ﺭﺯﻳﻚ, romanized, Ṭalāʾīʿ, ruzzīk, with, full, titles, surnames, abū, gharāt, fāris, muslimīn, malik, Ṣāliḥ, Ṭalāʾīʿ, ruzzīk, ghassānī, armanī, military, commander, official, fatimid, caliphate, serving, vizier, from, 1154, unti. Tala i ibn Ruzzik Arabic طلائع ﺑﻦ ﺭﺯﻳﻚ romanized Ṭalaʾiʿ ibn Ruzzik with his full titles and surnames Abu l Gharat Faris al Muslimin al Malik al Ṣaliḥ Ṭalaʾiʿ ibn Ruzzik al Ghassani al Armani was a military commander and official of the Fatimid Caliphate serving as its vizier from 1154 until his assassination in 1161 when he was succeeded by his son Ruzzik ibn Tala i He is generally acknowledged as the last of the powerful and capable viziers of the Fatimid state During his tenure the Fatimid Caliphate regained a measure of stability and was once again able to project its power abroad and pursue its political interests in the Eastern Mediterranean Tala i ibn RuzzikDied10 September 1161CairoNationalityFatimid CaliphateOccupation s Military commander governor vizierYears activebefore 1153 1161 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Vizierate 2 1 Domestic policies 2 2 Conflict with the Crusaders 3 Death and succession 4 Assessment 5 References 6 SourcesEarly life and career editAlthough his nisbah of al Ghassani implies an origin form the Arab tribe of the Ghassanids most authors consider Tala i ibn Ruzzik an Armenian whence the surname al Armani and indicate that his father was among those Armenians who came to Egypt under the rule of the powerful Armenian vizier Badr al Jamali and his son al Afdal Shahanshah Indeed some writers thought that he was born in Armenia 1 Born at the beginning of the 12th century 2 at first Ibn Ruzzik appears to have pursued a career in Iraq where he also converted to Twelver Shi ism as evidenced by the correspondence he maintained thereafter with Mosul Kufa and Hillah 1 At an unknown point he joined the Fatimid army His career there is unknown but by 1143 4 he was governor of al Buhayra when he subdued a rebellion of the Lawata Berbers Later he participated in the revolt of al Adil ibn al Sallar and his stepson Abbas ibn Abi al Futuh against the vizier Ibn Masal winter 1149 50 winning an important victory for the rebels 1 He then held the governorships of Aswan and of Qus the capital of Upper Egypt By 1154 he was governor of either Asyut in Upper Egypt Ashmunayn and al Bahnasa or of Munyat Bani al Khasib 1 In April of that year Abbas ibn Abi al Futuh and his son Nasr who had already assassinated Ibn al Sallar murdered Caliph al Zafir Abbas placed the five year old al Fa iz on the throne and executed two of al Zafir s brothers whom he accused of responsibility for al Zafir s assassination 1 3 Thereupon the women of the palace led by al Zafir s sister Sitt al Qusur reportedly cut off their hair and sent it to Ibn Ruzzik requesting of him to save the dynasty Ibn Ruzzik mobilized his forces the holders of the iqṭaʿ fiefs and allied Arab and Berber tribes and marched on Cairo where Abbas attempts to organize resistance foundered on popular opposition to his regime As Ibn Ruzzik appeared before the city Abbas his son and their chief supporters escaped the city towards Syria Sitt al Qusur sent word of their escape to the Crusaders of the Kingdom of Jerusalem however and Abbas was killed while Nasr was taken captive and sent back to Egypt where he was executed by the women of the palace 1 3 4 The treasure of the palace however which Abbas had loaded on a train of 600 mules and camels and taken with him was kept by the Crusaders 5 Vizierate editDomestic policies edit Thus in July 1154 Ibn Ruzzik entered Cairo in triumph The symbols he chose during his entry carried ominous overtones for the future of the Fatimid dynasty eschewing Fatimid white both the standards of his army and Ibn Ruzzik s own clothes were black the colour of the Fatimids arch rivals the Abbasids 6 He then installed himself in the Dar al Ma mun palace and began a purge of the officials and their families who had collaborated with Abbas Those found guilty were executed or sent to exile while a few managed to escape to Yemen 7 This left Ibn Ruzzik now vizier as the undisputed ruler of the country the underage Caliph al Fa iz was reduced to a mere figurehead and lived under virtual house arrest 3 He was the first Fatimid vizier to assume the honorific laqab of al Malik king according to Thierry Bianquis this was probably in imitation of the earlier Buyid dynasty who were likewise Imamis and who exercised a similar role as the guardians of and de facto rulers instead of the Abbasid caliphs However it was also a title used by the other great contemporary Muslim ruler Nur al Din Zengi of Syria 7 Himself well educated in high Arabic culture and a capable poet Ibn Ruzzik liked to surround himself with scholars among whom the most notable were the qaḍi al Muhadhdhab al Hasan ibn Ali ibn al Zubayr from Aswan and the katib al Jalis al Makin ibn al Hubab who directed the chancery diwan al inshaʾ 7 Abbas flight with the state treasure left a problematic financial situation but Ibn Ruzzik proved an energetic and capable administrator who paid close attention to financial matters he not only balanced the economy but also amassed a huge personal property through confiscations and speculation in cereals 7 Much of his personal wealth was used to endow pious establishments including the large Husayn Mosque outside the Bab Zuwayla gate intended to house a precious relic the head of Husayn ibn Ali This was the last major monument built under the Fatimids in Cairo and was fortified according to the style of Upper Egypt 7 Having served long in Upper Egypt Ibn Ruzzik maintained close ties to it upon becoming vizier he financed the reconstruction of the main mosque at Qus The area now became his main powerbase a wealthy region which controlled access to the interior of the African continent as well as the commerce routes linking Egypt with Arabia including the symbolically important hajj routes and the wheat supply for Mecca and Medina and the Indian Ocean 1 The support of the governor of Qus Nasir al Dawla Yaqut was important in suppressing the rebellion of the governor of Damietta al Ahwad ibn Tamim in 1156 but Yaqut himself plotted an uprising in 1157 in consultation with one of the Caliphs aunts who resented Ibn Ruzzik s interference in palace affairs Yaqut was arrested in Cairo and replaced with Izz al Din Tarkhan followed by Shawar one of Ibn Ruzzik s pages and future vizier 7 Conflict with the Crusaders edit nbsp Political map of the Levant in c 1165 In spring 1154 a Crusader fleet from the Kingdom of Sicily raided the port city of Tinnis with devastating effect Newly come to power in Cairo Ibn Ruzzik initially sought to placate the Crusaders by paying them tribute in exchange for a truce To this end he planned to raise new taxes on the iqṭaʿ fiefs of his officers The latter were opposed to the idea and instead launched a raid of their own against the Crusader port of Tyre The operation bold and unorthodox was successful and scuppered Ibn Ruzzik s plans 2 7 In April 1154 Nur al Din Zengi the Muslim ruler of northern Syria succeeded in capturing Damascus Encouraged by this event Ibn Ruzzik abandoned his negotiations with the Crusaders and renewed efforts to form a league between Egypt and Nur al Din which had already been attempted by Ibn al Sallar in 1150 8 In 1158 Ibn Ruzzik sent the ḥadjib Mahmud al Muwallad to Nur al Din proposing an alliance and joint operations against the Crusader principalities 7 while an army under Dirgham the deputy chamberlain of the palace naʾib al Bab was dispatched to raid into Palestine The army scored some successes at Gaza and raided in Palestine up to beyond the Jordan River while the Fatimid fleet raided against Beirut 2 7 These victories emboldened Ibn Ruzzik who wrote of them to Nur al Din exhorting him to join with Egypt in holy war against the Crusaders He also tried to enlist Usama ibn Munqidh a former Fatimid official who had gained Nur al Din s favour in support of this cause but in vain Usama refused to take sides and al Muwallad s embassy failed 9 These operations were judged as ineffective both by Arab chroniclers and modern historians while the reasons behind Nur al Din s passivity have been debated 7 Nevertheless these operations forced the other powers of the eastern Mediterranean to once again take account of Fatimid power In the aftermath of the raid a mission from the Byzantine Empire arrived at Cairo asking for assistance against the Kingdom of Sicily In reply the brother of the ruler of Cyprus who had been taken prisoner was sent to the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Komnenos 7 Soon after envoys from the Crusader realms arrived to arrange a truce while the Byzantines restored their relations with Nur al Din 7 At the same time Ibn Ruzzik tok care to fortify the city of Bilbays north of Cairo to block any army invading the country from the north 10 Death and succession editOn 23 July 1160 Caliph al Fa iz died of illness Ibn Ruzzik at first considered raising an adult member of the Fatimid clan to the caliphate but in the end settled on the nine year old al Adid whose father was one of the brothers of al Zafir executed by Abbas on the very day al Fa iz had been raised to the throne 10 With a minor once again on the throne Ibn Ruzzik s position was secure and was strengthened further when he forced the young caliph to marry his daughter 10 However these moves coupled with Ibn Ruzzik s patronage of Twelver Shi ism alarmed the royal family Sitt al Qusur paid black soldiers who attacked Ibn Ruzzik on 10 September 1161 in the hallway of his palace 10 11 Mortally wounded Ibn Ruzzik nevertheless survived long enough to secure from the Caliph the recognition of his son Ruzzik ibn Tala i as his successor as well as the death of Sitt al Qusur and the three men who had attacked him 10 On his deathbed he reportedly confided to his son his three regrets the construction of the Husayn Mosque outside the walls which could be used to attack Cairo that he did not have the opportunity to use Bilbays as a base against the Crusaders despite the expenses lavished on it and having put Shawar ibn Mujir al Sa di in the powerful position of governor of Upper Egypt from where he now posed a threat to his own power 10 His premonition proved true in 1162 Shawar chased Ibn Tala i from Cairo and became the de facto ruler of Egypt 11 In 1174 one of his descendants took part in an abortive large scale conspiracy to overthrow Saladin and restore the Fatimids who had been deposed three years previously to power 12 Assessment editMuslim chroniclers were divided in their assessment of Ibn Ruzzik the Egyptian historian Ibn Zafir focused on his violent behaviour and greed but the 13th century polymath Ibn Sa id al Maghribi considered him among the most successful Fatimid viziers along the likes of Ibn Killis or al Afdal Shahanshah 10 This assessment is largely shared by modern historians Thierry Bianquis describes him as the last great man of the Faṭimid state who wanted to reconstruct a strong Egypt which could carry out its own foreign policies 10 References edit a b c d e f g Bianquis 2000 p 149 a b c Brett 2007 p 22 a b c Daftary 1990 p 250 Lev 1991 p 61 Bianquis 2000 pp 149 150 Bianquis 2000 pp 149 150 a b c d e f g h i j k l Bianquis 2000 p 150 Brett 2007 p 21 Brett 2007 pp 21 24 a b c d e f g h Bianquis 2000 p 151 a b Lev 1991 p 62 Daftary 1990 pp 253 254 Sources edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Fatimid Caliphate portal nbsp Egypt portal Bianquis Thierry 2000 Ṭalaʾiʿ b Ruzzik In Bearman P J Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E amp Heinrichs W P eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume X T U Leiden E J Brill pp 149 151 doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam SIM 7356 ISBN 978 90 04 11211 7 Brett Michael 2007 The Fatimids and the Counter Crusade 1099 1171 In Vermeulen Urbain D Hulster K eds Egypt and Syria in the Faṭimid Ayyubid and Mamluk Eras Proceedings of the 11th 12th and 13th International Colloquium organised at the Katholieke Universiteit in Leuven in May 2002 2003 and 2004 Leuven pp 15 26 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Daftary Farhad 1990 The Ismaʿi li s Their History and Doctrines Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 37019 6 Lev Yaacov 1991 State and Society in Fatimid Egypt Leiden Brill ISBN 9789004093447 Sanders Paula A 1998 The Fatimid State 969 1171 In Petry Carl F ed The Cambridge History of Egypt Volume 1 Islamic Egypt 640 1517 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 151 174 ISBN 0 521 47137 0 Preceded byAbbas ibn Abi al Futuh Vizier of the Fatimid Caliphate1154 1161 Succeeded byRuzzik ibn Tala i Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tala 27i ibn Ruzzik amp oldid 1222558771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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