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  1. When Nur al-Din took power he had reason to view the Antiochenes as a serious threat and he responded by staging a campaign against them in c.1147, seizing several major frontier strongholds. 41 Then, in 1148, Nur al-Din invaded again but on this occasion was seriously defeated at Yaghra.

  2. 21 de mar. de 2020 · Tras la muerte de Nur al-Din, en mayo de 1174, estalló el conflicto entre sus sucesores y Saladino, que se proclamaba a sí mismo el verdadero sucesor del legado de Nur al-Din. Consolidó su autoridad en Egipto y, en octubre de 1174 tomó control de Damasco y se autoproclamó campeón de la ortodoxia suní.

  3. 7 de abr. de 2016 · Su padre fue Amalarico I de Jerusalén , más conocido por enfrentarse a sangre y fuego contra Nur al-Din -uno de los líderes musulmanes más destacados del siglo XII en Tierra Santa- por el ...

  4. Feb 11, 1118 - May 15, 1174. Nūr al-Dīn Maḥmūd Zengī, commonly known as Nur ad-Din, was a member of the Oghuz Turkish Zengid dynasty, which ruled the Syrian province of the Seljuk Empire. He reigned from 1146 to 1174. He is regarded as an important figure of the Second Crusade.

  5. 13 de ene. de 2020 · In the aftermath of the failure of the Second Crusade (1147-1149 CE), which only managed to bring Damascus under Nur ad-Din's (sometimes also given as Nur al-Din, l. 1118-1174 CE) dominion, Egypt acquired top priority – both from a strategic and economic point of view, for the Crusaders and the Zengids (Oghuz Turkic rulers of regions in Syria and Iraq).

  6. Nur-al-Din Moḥammad II died, possibly of poison, on 10 Rabiʿ I 607/1 September 1210 and was succeeded at Alamut by his eldest son Jalāl-al-Din Ḥasan. Bibliography : Anonymous, Haft bāb-e Bābā Sayyednā , in Two Early Ismaili Treatises , ed. Wladimir Ivanow, Bombay, 1933, pp. 4-44.