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  1. Nusrat al-Din Abu Bakr (Persian: نصرت الدین ابوبکر), was the ruler of the Eldiguzids from 1191 to 1210. He used the titles of Jahan-pahlavan ("champion of the world"), al-Malik al-Mu'azzam ("the respected king"), and Shahanshah al-A'zam ("the great king of kings").

    • Crowning A Queen
    • Her Own Queen
    • To War
    • Aunt Tamar The Empire Builder
    • Tamar's Legacy

    Tamar was the eldest daughter of George III of Georgia (aka Giorgi III, r. 1156-1184 CE). Without any sons of his own, and having blinded and castrated his only nephew after a rebel fomented around him, George had no male heirs. But George made his decision of successor clear, unlike his father Demetrius I of Georgia (aka Demetre I, r. 1125-1156 CE...

    In 1188 CE, not only was Yuri sent away but Catholicos Mikel also died. Freed from their control, Tamar chose her own men to fill the top positions in Georgia, including interior minister and commander-in-chief. The Mkhargrdzeli brothers, Zakare and Ivane, became especially important as advisors and military commanders. She next married someone of ...

    Georgia was once again secure, and in 1192 CE, Tamar gave birth to the future George IV. To celebrate, David Soslan launched two military campaigns, capturing the city of Bardavi, the old capital of Albania in the eastern Caucasus, and Erzurum. In response, the Caliph in Baghdad declared a jihad of all Muslims against Georgia. Nusrat al-Din Abu Bak...

    While Georgia was victorious in the east, Constantinople had been surrounded by and sacked by the Fourth Crusade in 1204 CE. While the Byzantine Empire was occupied with the Crusaders and then disintegrated into a successor land grab when Constantinople was sacked, Tamar was engaged in a new adventure in Byzantineterritory on the Black Sea. Tamar's...

    Under Tamar, Georgia reached its greatest territorial and political height. Its armies campaigned from Trebizond to Iran, and Georgia was undisputedly a major power in the region. Tamar is almost certainly the most lauded of Georgia's medieval rulers and was written about and eulogized by Georgians medieval and modern. Contemporary poet Shota Rusta...

  2. Nusrat al-Din Abu Bakr ( persa: نصرت الدین ابوبکر), fue el gobernante ( atabeg) de los Eldiguzids desde 1191 hasta 1210. Usó los títulos de Jahan-pahlavan ("campeón del mundo"), al-Malik al -Mu'azzam ("el rey respetado") y Shahanshah al-A'zam ("el gran rey de reyes").

  3. After the death of Abu Bakr, Muzaffar al-Din Uzbek came to power. He was the fifth and last ruler of the Eldiguzids from 1210 to 1225. During his reign, the country was attacked by Mongols and Georgians.

  4. Nusrat al-Din Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad Pahlawan fou atabeg ildegízida de l' Azerbaidjan (1191-1210) amb el títol de Djahan Pahlawan i els de Sultan al-Muazzam (o al-Azam) i Shahanshah al-Muazzam (o al-Azam).

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › EldiguzidsEldiguzids - Wikipedia

    Victorious in power struggle, Abu Bakr "Jahan-pahlavan" (c. 1195–1210) had his elder brother Qutluq Inandj assassinated and forced the younger brother, Amir Mihran, to take refuge at the court of the latter's brother-in-law, Shirvanshah Akhsitan I (c.1160-1196).

  6. Nusrat al-Din Abu Bakr , was the ruler of the Eldiguzids from 1191 to 1210. He used the titles of Jahan-pahlavan , al-Malik al-Mu'azzam , and Shahanshah al-A'zam .