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  1. Hace 1 día · The Seljuk Empire, or the Great Seljuk Empire, [13] [a] was a high medieval, culturally Turco-Persian, Sunni Muslim empire, established and ruled by the Qïnïq branch of Oghuz Turks. [16] [17] The empire spanned a total area of 3.9 million square kilometres (1.5 million square miles) from Anatolia and the Levant in the west to the Hindu Kush ...

  2. Hace 5 días · Malik-Shāh (born Aug. 6/16, 1055—died November 1092, Baghdad [Iraq]) was the third and most famous of the Seljuq sultans. Malik-Shāh succeeded his father, Alp-Arslan, in 1072 under the tutelage of the great vizier Niẓām al-Mulk, who was the real manager of the empire until his death.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Hace 1 día · The earliest documented Rum Seljuq copper coins were made in the first part of the twelfth century in Konya and the eastern Anatolian emirates. Extensive numismatic evidence suggests that, starting in the middle of the thirteenth century and continuing until the end of the Seljuk dynasty, silver-producing mints and silver coinage flourished, particularly in central and eastern Anatolia.

  4. Hace 4 días · For many centuries, starting in the early modern period with Ismail I, Shah of Safavid Persia, and Ottoman Sultan Selim I, the Kurds came under the suzerainty of the two most powerful empires of the Near East and staunch arch rivals, the Sunni Ottoman Empire and the various Shia Empires.

  5. Hace 5 días · Alparslan: The Great Seljuk's story:Following the battle of Manzikert, the Turkic tribes make it to the Land of the Romans led by the victorious sultan Alparslan, changing the history of the...

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  6. Hace 4 días · The Ghaznavid and early Seljuq Periods It is said that four hundred poets were attached to the court of Sultan Mahmoud; of these, the most notable were Unsuri, the greatest of Mahmoud's panegyrists, followed by Farrukhi, Manouchehri and Asadi.

  7. Hace 2 días · The city was besieged and pillaged by the Byzantine army of Nicephorus II Phocas in 962. A period of war and disorder followed, fueled by local power struggles and by Byzantine, Fāṭimid, and Seljuq efforts to gain control of northern Syria. Gate of the medieval citadel of Aleppo, Syria.