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Mamluks of Jewish Origin in the Mamluk Sultanate

2019
Students of the Mamluk Sultanate generally do not refer to the phenomenon of mamluks (i.e., slaves, and more specifically military slaves) of Jewish origin. David Ayalon noted that “there is hardly any trace of a Mamlūk of Jewish origin in the Mamlūk sultanate.” Moreover, it is thought that Jews were not considered suitable for warfare.
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The Mamluk Sultanate

2022
The Mamluk Sultanate ruled Egypt, Syria and the Arabian hinterland along the Red Sea. Lasting from the deposition of the Ayyubid dynasty (c. 1250) to the Ottoman conquest of Egypt in 1517, this regime of slave-soldiers incorporated many of the political structures and cultural traditions of its Fatimid and Ayyubid predecessors.
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Cairo of the Mamluks

2007
Cairo of the Mamluks was "a city beyond imagination", wrote the Arab philosopher Ibn Khaldun. The Mamluk sultans originated as a slave-based caste who took advantage of the mid-13th century power vacuum to establish themselves as rulers. They designed their capital to be the heart of the Muslim world.
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Mongols and Mamluks

1995
For sixty years, from 1260 to 1323, the Mamluk state in Egypt and Syria was at war with the Ilkhanid Mongols based in Persia. This is the first comprehensive study of the political and military aspects of the early years of the war, from the battle of 'Ayn Jalut in 1260 to the battle of Homs in 1281.
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Mamluk Jerusalem

Antiquity, 1988
A review of a major book on medieval Jerusalem is the opportunity also to look at the balance of attention that has been given to different aspects of the city's history.
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On the Interest of Mamluk Sultans and Amirs to the Hanefite in the Mamluk State

2019
İslâmtarihindeki en büyük Müslüman Türk devletleri arasında kabul edilen Memlükler(1250-1517), Haçlılar ve Moğollara karşı büyük başarıları ve bu sayede İslâmdünyasının hamisi olmaları gibi bazı özellikleri ile tanınmaktadır. Bu devletiöne çıkaran özellikleri arasında ilme ve ulemaya gösterdiği alaka, kurduğubirçok medrese vasıtasıyla Sünnîliğin Mısır ...
AYAZ, Fatih Yahya   +1 more
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The Mamluk City

2008
Maqrizi described with nostalgia the reign of al-Nasir Muhammad as the golden age of Cairo's history. During al-Nasir's reign eight mosques were built at Husayniyya, six in the northwestern outskirts including Bulaq, six in the southwestern zone, ten within al-Qahira, 16 between Bab Zuwayla and Ibn Tulun, four in the southern cemetery and three in the ...
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Mongols and Mamluks: The Mamluk-Ilkhanid War, 1260-1281.

The Journal of Military History, 1997
Mary Ann Fay, Reuven Amitai-Preiss
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The Ottomans and the Mamluks

2014
Transliteration and Diacriticals Preface Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1: Apparatus of Diplomacy Chapter 2: Perceptions in Transformation Chapter 3: From Titulature to Geopolitical Affairs: An Age of Negotiations Chapter 4: Imperial Ambition Resurrected Chapter 5: Captivity Narratives to Peace Treaty: a New Era of Image Building Chapter 6: From
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MAMLUK JEWELRY: INFLUENCES AND ECHOES

Muqarnas Online, 1987
Pendentifs et pieces de bijoux en or, principalement du National Museum de Damas montrant une influence fatimide et suggerant une provenance egyptienne ou syrienne. Sarcophage en argent de Sainte Helena| couronne en or dite de Constantin Monomaque, en realite posterieure au 13e siecle, sur la provenance de laquelle s'interroge l'A. Similitudes avec des
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