FATIMID

fătˈĭmĭd or Fatimite–ĭmīt, dynasty claiming to hold the caliphate on the basis of descent from Fatima, a daughter of Muhammad the Prophet. In doctrine the Fatimids were related to other Shiite sects. The dynasty's founder, Said ibn Husayn of NE Syria, was long engaged in religious activity. A follower went (c.893) to NW Africa and inspired the Berbers to rebel against their Sunni Aghlabid rulers. Said ibn Husayn attempted (c.903) to join Al-Shii in NE Algeria, but he was arrested at Tripoli by the Aghlabid governor. He was rescued (909) by Al-Shii who in the meantime had overthrown the Aghlabids and won Tunisia, Sicily, NE Algeria, and NW Libya for the Fatimids. Said ibn Husayn was then hailed as the Mahdi. He took the name Ubaidallah (Obaidallah) and set up a caliphate in opposition to the Abbasid Caliphate of Baghdad. His execution of Al-Shii caused (911) a short-lived rebellion among the tribes who had first supported the Fatimid claims. From their fortress capital of Mahdia, the Fatimids dominated most of NW Africa. Their fleets continually ravaged the W Mediterranean. After Ubaidallah's death in 934, Malta, Sardinia, Corsica, the Balearics, and, for a time, Genoa were taken and held. In the reign (953–75) of the 4th caliph, Moizz, Fatimid fortunes reached their height. Moizz's great general, Jahr, easily took Egypt in 969. Subsequently, Jahr conquered Palestine, parts of Syria, and W Arabia. In 973, Moizz moved his capital to Egypt and the new city of Cairo. The policy of employing mercenary troops begun by the 5th caliph, Aziz, was to prove fatal to the dynasty. Hakim (996–1021), the 6th caliph, abandoned the religious toleration of his ancestors. He persecuted the Jews and Christians and destroyed (1010) the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem. In 1020, Hakim proclaimed himself the reincarnation of God. This claim was accepted only in Syria, where it is still espoused by the Druze. After Hakim's assassination, Fatimid power rapidly declined. Factious mercenary soldiers thereafter constantly threatened to destroy the state. The caliphs lost power to a series of viziers who eventually even took the title of king. Syria, Algeria, and Tunisia fell away (1043–48). By 1071 the Normans had conquered Sicily. Palestine was taken (1099) by the Crusaders, and the Fatimids were left with little more than Egypt. When the Assassins killed (1130) Amir, the last caliph of any ability, the country lapsed into anarchy. In 1171 Adid, the 14th and last of the Fatimid rulers, died.

See D. L. O'Leary, Short History of the Fatimid Khalifate (1923).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Fatimid
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books on: Fatimid  - 439 results

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RITUAL, POLITICS, AND THE CITY IN FATIMID CAIRO SUNY Series in Medieval Middle East...Editor RITUAL, POLITICS, AND THE CITY IN FATIMID CAIRO PAULA SANDERS State University...Paula. Ritual, politics, and the city in Fatimid Cairo / Paula Sanders. p. cm...
...Shawar 61 c The Betrayal of the Fatimid State 66 d The Battle of the Blacks 81 e The Demise of the Fatimid State 84 f The Conspiracy of...108 1 The Dismemberment of the Fatimid State 108 a The Appropriation...
...Ajdabiya Roman Corniclanum Prominent Fatimid city in Libiya. Ajdabiyas owed its importance...known in Roman times, it was during the Fatimid period that the city achieved its greatest development. Several remains of the Fatimid complex have been recovered including...
...Islam 60 7 An Interpretation of Fatimid History 66 8 Propaganda in the...pp. 237 42. 7. An Interpretation of Fatimid History. This paper was presented to...historical and religious background of the Fatimid Caliphs, a dynasty that came to power...
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journal articles on: Fatimid  - 45 results

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...Victorious: Islamic Art and Architecture in Fatimid North Africa and Egypt. by Paul E...Victorious: Islamic Art and Architecture in Fatimid North Africa and Egypt. By JONATHAN M...Jonathan Bloom presents the entire scope of Fatimid art, from its earliest phases in the Maghrib...
Fatimid History and Ismaili Doctrine: Between Revolution and State: The Path to Fatimid Statehood. Qadi Al-Numan and the Construction of Fatimid Legitimacy: The Ismailis in the Middle Ages: A History of Survival, a Search for Salvation...
...Revolution and State: the Path to Fatimid Statehood by Peter B. White...Revolution and State: The Path to Fatimid Statehood, by Sumaiya A. Hamdani...Hamdani examines the transition of the Fatimids from a religiously homogenous movement...
Egypt and Syria in the Fatimid, Ayyubid, and Mamluk Eras: Proceedings...years. Nine of the articles are on the Fatimids, six on the Ayyubids, and eight on...Ramla in 1099-1105 and the other on the Fatimid origins of some Mamluk military institutions...
...in the Coptic Church in Egypt during the Fatimid Period by Marlis J. Saleh The period of Fatimid rule in Egypt (969-1171 C. E.) has generally...wealthy and rose to great heights in the Fatimid government (one even became a ruling "vizier...
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magazine articles on: Fatimid  - 23 results

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...from its Byzantine heyday. In 1009 the Fatimid caliph al-Hakim, who was possibly mad...could not pay the entry toll levied by the Fatimid authorities. Running out of money was...there arrived a relief force sent by the Fatimid authorities, mindful of the value of keeping...
...al-Hallaj. They learn that Muslim states in the past such as the Fatimid Empire protected minorities such as Christians and Jews, and...educational project since the creation of Al-Azhar University in Fatimid Cairo in the tenth century. AKU started with a medical school...
...however, are less interested in his thoughts on Fatimids and Safavids than in the name he gave to their...examples. In a 1972 essay, "An Interpretation of Fatimid History," Lewis writes that the Fatimid caliphate in Cairo sent missionaries to the...
...Seljuks and the Arab (and Shiite Moslem) Fatimid dynasty, with massacres by both sides. Before that, the mad Fatimid caliph Al-Hakim, who ruled 996-1021...brutal mistreatment at the hands of the Fatimids. Gibbon says that only 2,000 returned...
...al-Qahira was built by the conquering Fatimids, this time with walls and several gates...the physical remains still belong to the Fatimid period, with fine examples of richly decorated...the first major expansion outside the Fatimid area. After destruction by fire in 1168...
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newspaper articles on: Fatimid  - 5 results

 
 
...crystal ewer, which dates back to the Fatimid rulers of Cairo in the late 10th century...made for the court of the Cairo-based Fatimid dynasty, which ruled across a swathe of...North Africa between 908 and 1187 A.D. Fatimid rulers conquered Egypt in 969 and renamed...
...Tutankhamuns tomb in the Egyptian Museum, the Pyramids of Giza and the Sphinx, Libyas capital, featuring Roman, Byzantine, Fatimid, Mameluke and Ottoman monuments and art and the Roman ruins at Leptis Magna. The cruise has an archaeology theme and sites...
...which occurs in Rabi al-awwal, the third month in the Islamic calendar. An account traces the origin of the observance to the Fatimid dynasty in the 11th century Egypt, four centuries after the death of Muhammad (peace be upon him) as a Shia ruling class festival...
...choose just one piece out of this hoard of treasures, though, I think it would have to be an astonishing Egyptian ewer from the Fatimid period, around the 11th Century. The design is stunning, animals and curlicues curving round each other in a stylised, satisfying...
...that prescription. The original mosque of Al Azhar resplendent or most shining ) was completed in 972 under the rule of the Fatimid Caliph al-Muizz, designed not just as a house of worship but as a center of public assembly and scholarship. Within a few years...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Fatimid  - 16 results

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FATIMID fat imid or Fatimite imit, dynasty claiming to hold...a daughter of Muhammad the Prophet. In doctrine the Fatimids were related to other Shiite sects. The dynastys founder...won Tunisia, Sicily, NE Algeria, and NW Libya for the Fatimids. Said ibn Husayn was then hailed as the Mahdi . He took...
OBAIDALLAH see Fatimid . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
UBAIDALLAH see Fatimid . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...was taken by the caliph Umar . Pilgrimages (see pilgrim ) were not cut off at first, but early in the 11th cent. the Fatimid caliph Hakim began to persecute the Christians and despoiled the Holy Sepulcher. Persecution abated after his death (1021...
...of Nur ad-Din, on campaigns (1164, 1167, 1168) against the Fatimid rulers of Egypt. Shirkuh became vizier there and on his death...succeeded by Saladin. Saladin later caused the name of the Shiite Fatimid caliph to be dropped from the Friday prayer, thus deposing...
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