Information om | Engelska ordet AGHLABID


AGHLABID

Antal bokstäver

8

Är palindrom

Nej

12
AB
ABI
AG
AGH
BI
BID
GH

1

1

376
AA
AAB
AAD


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Exempel på hur man kan använda AGHLABID i en mening

  • 870 – The city of Melite surrenders to an Aghlabid army following a siege, putting an end to Byzantine Malta.
  • March – Abu Abbas Abdallah resumes his Aghlabid campaign against the Byzantine enclaves of Sicily.
  • February – March – Abu Abbas Abdallah, conqueror of Reggio Calabria, returns from Sicily and succeeds his father Ibrahim II as Aghlabid emir of Ifriqiya.
  • May – Ibrahim II, Aghlabid emir of Ifriqiya, sends a large army to Palermo, to impose Arab authority from Kairouan.
  • Radelchis, now pacified, had no need of his Aghlabid mercenaries and happily betrayed them to the emperor.
  • The Rustamids fought the Kairouan-based Aghlabids of Ifriqiya in 812, but otherwise reached a modus vivendi; this displeased Ibādī tribes on the Aghlabid border, who launched a few rebellions.
  • The most important ribats are those of Monastir, built by governor Harthama ibn A'yun in 796, and of Sousse, built by the Aghlabid emirs.
  • To end the constant mutinies of his army, the Aghlabid magistrate of Ifriqiya sent Arabian, Berber, and Andalusian rebels to conquer Sicily in 827, 830 and 875, led by, amongst others, Asad ibn al-Furat.
  • Abu Yazid was an eyewitness to the end of the Ibadi imamate in 909: after the overthrow of the Aghlabid emirate by the Isma'ili preacher Abu Abdallah al-Shi'i and his Kutama followers, the latter marched west to Sijilmasa, to bring his hidden master, Abdallah al-Mahdi Billah, back to Ifriqiya to assume the throne of the Fatimid Caliphate.
  • Here he welcomed two waves of Arab immigration: one in 818 from Cordoba and another in 824 from Aghlabid Tunisia, giving Fes a more Arab character than other Maghrebi cities.
  • The fighting lasted until the asr prayer (late afternoon), when a unit of 575 Kutama warriors, having circled around the battlefield in a deep streambed, attacked the Aghlabid army in the flank.
  • A centralizing ruler, Ibrahim mistrusted the old Arab high aristocracy of Ifriqiya, which had often been a thorn in the side of prior Aghlabid emirs.
  • The current state of the mosque can be traced back to the Aghlabid period—no element is earlier than the ninth century besides the mihrab—except for some partial restorations and a few later additions made in 1025 during the Zirid period, 1248 and 1293–1294 under the reign of the Hafsids, 1618 at the time of Muradid beys, and in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.
  • The Aghlabids were major builders and erected many of Tunisia's oldest Islamic religious buildings and practical infrastructure works like the Aghlabid Reservoirs of Kairouan.
  • Inside the mihrab is a marble plaque covered in gold leaf and carved with an Aghlabid Kufic inscription with religious formulas such as the shahada.
  • In fact, in the middle of the ninth century, the Aghlabids who used to rule Ifrikia agreed on supporting the city's shores with forts and trusses, that's when Borj Sfax or Kasbah of Sfax was built as one of the forts, but as time passed and life evolved around it the Aghlabid decided to build the city of Sfax.
  • According to Basil I's grandson, the 10th-century emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos, in 866 the Aghlabids launched a major seaborne campaign against the coasts of Dalmatia, with 36 ships under the command of "Soldan" (Sawdan, the Aghlabid emir of Bari), Saba of Taranto, and Kalfun the Berber.
  • Fezzan was home to a Beber people known as Garamantes
    Divided between the Achaemenid Empire (Satrapy of Libya; Cyrenaica) and the Carthaginian Monarchy, later the Carthaginian Republic (Tripolitania) (525 BC–331 BC)
    Divided between the Empire of Alexander the Great (Cyrenaica) and the Carthaginian Republic (Tripolitania) (331 BC–323 BC)
    Divided between the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt (Cyrenaica) and the Carthaginian Republic (Tripolitania) (323 BC–201 BC)
    Part of the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt (Cyrenaica) (201 BC–107 BC)
    Part of the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt (Cyrenaica) (201 BC–107 BC)
    Divided between the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt (Cyrenaica) and the 24px Roman Republic (Tripolitania) (107 BC–95 BC)
    Africa proconsularis (Tripolitania) and Crete and Cyrenaica (later divided in Libya Pentapolis and Libya sicaa), provinces of the 24px Roman Republic (later the Roman Empire) (97 BC – AD 395)
    Divided between the Eastern Roman Empire (Provinces of Libya Pentapolis and Libya sicca) and the Western Roman Empire (Province of Tripolitania) (395–439)
    Divided between the Eastern Roman Empire (Provinces of Libya Pentapolis and Libya sicca) and the Vandal Kingdom (Tripolitania) (439–533)
    Part of the Exarchate of Africa (553–648) (Part of the Eastern Roman Empire)
    Part of the Rashidun Caliphate (648–656)
    Part of the 24px Umayyad Caliphate (663–683)
    Divided between the 24px Umayyad Caliphate (Cyrenaica) and the Eastern Roman Empire (Tripolitania) (683–694)
    Part of the 24px Umayyad Caliphate (694–750)
    Part of the 24px Abbasid Caliphate (750–800)
    Divided between the 24px Abbasid Caliphate (Cyrenaica) and the Aghlabid Emirate (Tripolitania) (800–868)
    Divided between the Tulunid Emirate (Cyrenaica) and the Aghlabid Emirate (Tripolitania) (868–906)
    Divided between the 24px Abbasid Caliphate (Cyrenaica) and the Aghlabid Emirate (Tripolitania) (906–909)
    Divided between the 24px Abbasid Caliphate (Cyrenaica) and the 24px Fatimid Caliphate (Tripolitania) (909–969)
    Part of the 24px Fatimid Caliphate (969–945)
    Divided between the 24px Abbasid Caliphate (Cyrenaica) and the 24px Fatimid Caliphate (Tripolitania) (945–961)
    Part of the 24px Fatimid Caliphate (961–973)
    .
  • Along with the development of the Aghlabid Dynasty, and the expansion of the ribat in the city occupied the south-west corner, the kasbah became the state's centerpiece, where the seat of the government was located.
  • He joined the Isma'ili da'wa led by Abu Abdallah al-Shi'i, and when Abu Abdallah overthrew the Aghlabid dynasty of Ifriqiya in March 909 and established the Fatimid Caliphate, Ibn Abi Khinzir was chosen as governor (amil) of the capital of Ifriqiya, Kairouan.


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