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  1. The objective of this article is namely to examine Nur al-Din’s preparation plan to liberate Islamicjerusalem, in particular if he had prepare the ground to achieve such a goal which was ...

  2. But Jerusalem was Nur al-Din’s ultimate, unrealized goal, and it fell to his successor, Saladin, to recapture the city and fill its sanctuaries with similarly rich Qur’an manuscripts. Contemporary chroniclers relate that Saladin had "copies, portions, and venerated sections of the Qur’an raised up on lecterns and placed on shelves in view of visitors."

  3. Nur al-Din was born in February 1118. He was the second son of Imad al-Din Zengi, a Turkish noble and ardent anti-crusader. Nur al-Din's father was assassinated in September 1146 by a Frankish enslaved person named Yarankash. Upon their father's death, Nur al-Din and his older brother Saif ad-Din Ghazi I divided their father's kingdom among ...

  4. Al-Mansur Nur al-Din Ali (en árabe: المنصور نور الدين علي) fue un sultán mameluco de Egipto, hijo del también sultán Aibek y que sucedió en el cargo a su padre cuando este fue asesinado en 1257. 1 Reinó entre marzo/abril de 1257 y noviembre/diciembre de 1259. Sin poder real, fue simplemente un títere en manos de los ...

  5. Vida y Biografía de Nur al-Din. (Al-Malik al-Ádil ibn Zangi Nur al-Din Mahmud; ?, 1118-Damasco, 1174) Atabeg de Alepo (1146-1174). Hijo de Imad al-Din Zangi, siguió la reunificación de Siria y combatió a los francos. En pelea contra los croatas, conquistó los condados de Edesa (1146-1150) y de Damasco (1154). Envió tropas a Egipto a ...

  6. 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.

  7. 6 de mar. de 2021 · Nur ad-Din Zengi did a fine job at that, though. Nur al-Din Mahmud Zengi, often spelled as Nuruddin Zangi, was from the Oghuz Turkic Zengid dynasty. An important figure leading the defences against the Second Crusade, Nur al-Din Zengi reigned for a little under three decades, from 1146 to 1174 CE. Nur ad-Din Zengi — Standing Against the Invaders