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  1. Los samánidas o samaníes (en persa: سامانیان ‎, transcrito como Sāmāniyān) fueron una de las primeras dinastías de emires iraníes que ejercieron su poder en las provincias orientales de Irán después de la conquista árabe.

  2. The Samanid Empire (Persian: سامانیان, romanized: Sāmāniyān), also known as the Samanian Empire, Samanid dynasty, Samanid amirate, or simply as the Samanids, was a Persianate Sunni Muslim empire, of Iranian dehqan origin.

  3. Samanid dynasty, Iranian dynasty that arose in what is now eastern Iran and Uzbekistan. It was renowned for the impulse that it gave to Iranian national expression. Its cultural contributions included the works of Rudaki and Ferdowsi as well as slip-painted pottery. The dynasty fell after Ghaznavid invasion.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. The Samanids (819–999) Sāmāniyān) were a Persian dynasty in Central Asia and Greater Khorasan, named after its founder Saman Khuda who converted to Sunni Islam despite being from Zoroastrian theocratic nobility.

  5. The Samanid Mausoleum is a mausoleum located in the northwestern part of Bukhara, Uzbekistan, just outside its historic center. It was built in the 10th century CE as the resting place of the powerful and influential Islamic Samanid dynasty that ruled the Samanid Empire from approximately 900 to 1000.

  6. The city rose to prominence under the Samanids, a Persian dynasty, ruling over northeastern Iran and western Central Asia from 819 to 1005 in service of the distant ‘Abbasid Caliph, the nominal head of the Islamic world , in Baghdad, the Samanids were effectively independent.

  7. The Samanid Empire, also known as the Samanian Empire, Samanid dynasty, Samanid amirate, or simply as the Samanids, was a Persianate Sunni Muslim empire, of Iranian dehqan origin. The empire was centred in Khorasan and Transoxiana; at its greatest extent encompassing northeastern Iran and Central Asia, from 819 to 999.