Results 21 to 30 of about 124 (109)

Relations between the Fatimids and Ghaznavids [PDF]

open access: yesتاریخ اسلام, 2004
During their rule, the Ghaznavids adopted an inflexible policy towards those opposed to the Abbasid caliphate. In line with rhis policy, they took a harsh stance against anti - Abbasid patries such as the Isma'ilis and Fatimids in Egypt.
Mohammad-Ali Chelongar
doaj  

Les Idrissides entre Fatimides et Omeyyades

open access: yesRevue des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée, 2016
The confrontation between Fatimids and Umayyads in the Maghrib throughout the 10th century turned upside down the local and political configurations.
Chafik T. Benchekroun
doaj   +1 more source

Los aspectos económicos en la Batalla por el Magreb entre omeyas y fāṭimíes: el control del acceso al oro del Sudán Occidental

open access: yesEspacio, Tiempo y Forma. Serie III, Historia Medieval, 2020
El objetivo de este artículo es resaltar uno de los factores decisivos en el enfrentamiento que durante el siglo X mantuvieron los Omeyas cordobeses y los califas fāṭimíes, y que tuvo como su principal escenario el Magreb Occidental, en la que hemos ...
José Luis de Villar Iglesias
doaj   +1 more source

The Abbasids and the Fatimids [PDF]

open access: yesتاریخ اسلام, 2006
The Fatimid rise to power coincided with the spread of their influence and territorial expansion into Abbasid controlled regions, and the inclination of the Muslim populace towards them.
Hediyeh Taghavi
doaj  

The Political Movement of Nizari Ismailies and its Relation with Iranian National Identity and Farsi Language [PDF]

open access: yesFaṣlnāmah-i Pizhūhish/hā-yi Rāhburdī-i Siyāsat, 2015
The formation of the Ismaili movement is rooted in the political-religious disputes of first two centuries of the Islamic history over the succession issues. The Ismail’s Fatimid could create big government in the form of an empire and for the first time
Habib allah Fazeli
doaj  

The Ḥammūdid Caliphate: A New Look through the Lens of Numismatics

open access: yesAl-'Usur al-Wusta, 2018
Of the caliphates of the Islamic West, the rule of the shortest duration was that of the Ḥammūdids (407/1016–446/1055). The Ḥammūdids, as descendants of the Prophet Muḥammad and members of the Idrīsid branch that had ruled in al-Maghrib al-Aqṣā (170/786 ...
Almudena Ariza Armada
doaj   +1 more source

A “Documentary Turn” in the Medieval History of Egypt and Syria?

open access: yesHistory Compass, Volume 23, Issue 10-12, October-December 2025.
ABSTRACT The field of medieval Middle East history has seen a renewed attention to the use of documentary sources in recent years. These sources have long seen some neglect, and their interpretation has suffered from a stubborn narrative of paucity that has tended to relegate them to the fringe of this history. With the impact of other scholarly trends
Daisy Livingston
wiley   +1 more source

Muslim Diasporas and the Politics of Belonging: Ibadi and Ismaili Pasts and Presents in East Africa

open access: yesReligion Compass, Volume 19, Issue 10-12, October-December 2025.
ABSTRACT This article examines the Ibadi and Ismaili Muslim communities in East Africa—particularly in Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania (including Zanzibar)—and their distinct religious, social, and economic roles. Even as minorities within predominantly Sunni contexts, both groups have shaped the region through migration, commerce, and international ...
Kimberly T. Wortmann
wiley   +1 more source

The Fatimids...and the trade route to India (358-567 AH / 969-1171 AD)

open access: yesآداب الكوفة, 2017
The issue of foreign trade is one of the important issues that show the vitality of the state and the extent of its influence on the external level. The strength of commercial activity results from the strength, stability and cohesion of the state on ...
محمود شاكر مشعان
doaj   +1 more source

New Insights Into Early Islamic Hydro‐Agricultural Strategies in Northwest Arabia: A Geoarchaeological Study of al‐Bint Dam (Sadd al‐Bint)

open access: yesGeoarchaeology, Volume 40, Issue 5, September/October 2025.
ABSTRACT The Sadd al‐Bint is one of the largest known ancient dams in Saudi Arabia, and yet, its construction date, function and collapse remained uncertain. This study presents the first numerical chronology for the dam, integrating radiocarbon dating, Bayesian modelling, geomorphological analysis and hydrological modelling to reconstruct its history.
Bruno Depreux   +13 more
wiley   +1 more source

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