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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Nur_al-DinNur al-Din - Wikipedia

    Nur al-Din. Nur al-Din ( Arabic: نور الدين, romanized : nūr ad-dīn) is a male Arabic given name, translating to "light of Faith", nūr meaning "light" and dīn meaning "religion". More recently, the name has also been used as a surname. There are many Romanized spelling variants of the name. The element نور can be spelled Nur, Noor ...

  2. 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.

  3. Died on 1174. Nūr ad-Dīn Abū al-Qāsim Maḥmūd ibn ʿImād ad-Dīn Zengī; (February 1118 – 15 May 1174), often shortened to his laqab Nur ad-Din (Arabic: نور الدين ‎, “Light of the Faith”), was a member of the Oghuz Turkish Zengid dynasty which ruled the Syrian province of the Seljuk Empire. He reigned from 1146 to 1174.

  4. www.encyclopedia.com › history › encyclopediasNureddin | Encyclopedia.com

    Nureddin. Nureddin (1118-1174), or Malik al-Adil Nur-al-Din Mahmud, was a Damascene ruler and one of several Moslem leaders striving to drive the Christian Crusaders out of the Levant. The father of Nureddin Imad-al-din, son of a Turkish slave of the Seljuk sultan Malik Shah, created a principality based in Mosul and stretching westward to Aleppo.

  5. Examines the inscriptions Nur al-Din (1146-74) that deal with his jihad against the Crusaders in relation to the monuments on which they were inscribed. The article concluded with an analysis of the unique jihad inscriptions on the famous pulpit that Nur al-Din endowed for the Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem.

  6. Damascus, Syria. The Bimaristan of Nur al-Din, also known as Bimaristan al-Nuri, is a historic hospital and medical school situated in the old city of Damascus, southwest of the Great Mosque. It was built in two phases. The Zangid sultan Nur al-Din Mahmud ibn Zangi erected the main building in 1154/548 AH. An extension was added in 1242 by a ...