-
Fatimid Imam-Caliph
al-Mustansir Billah. Its
construction was
sponsored by Badr
al-Jamali, the
vizier of
al-Mustansir, who was Amir
al-
Juyush (Arabic: امير...
- 1343 CE, by or
under the
guidance of the
Iranian architect Zahiruddin alJuyush, also
credited with the
construction of the
Khurramabad Palace. The second...
- Nasr (1
November 1287 – 16
November 1322), full name Abu
al-
Juyush Nasr ibn
Muhammad (Arabic: أبو الجيوش نصر بن محمد), was the
fourth Nasrid ruler of...
- Badr ibn
Abdallah al-Jamali
al-Mustansiri,
better known as Badr
al-Jamali (Arabic: بدر الجمالى) or by his
eventual title as Amir
al-
Juyush (أمير الجيوش, lit...
- (Badr
al-Din
al-Jamali) who was
known by his
military title Amīr
al-
Juyūsh (Arabic: أمير الجيوش;
General of the Armies)
where the name '
Juyush-i' was...
-
bureau (dīwān), the 'department for the
armies and recruitment' (dīwān
al-
juyūsh wa'l-rawātib). The
government was also
responsible for
providing the troops...
-
known as Abu Ali
Ahmad ibn
al-Afdal or
al-Afdal Kutayfāt, (d. 1131) was
vizier and amīr
al-
juyūsh (commander of the armies) to
al-Hafiz,
Caliph of Egypt,...
- Abu'-Fatḥ Nāṣir (or Amīr)
al-
Juyūsh Sayf
al-Islām
Sharaf al-Islām Yānis
al-Rūmī
al-Armanī
al-Ḥāfiẓī,
commonly simply known by his
given name Yānis (i.e...
- the Buyids, the
forms ʿamīd
al-dawla, ʿamīd
al-dīn and ʿamīd
al-
juyūsh are attested.
Under the Ghaznavids, the ṣāḥib
al-barīd (head of the
postal service)...
-
master Nur ad-Din,
becoming the new
Fatimid vizier and amir
al-
juyush with the
approval of
Caliph al-Adid, and
therefore bringing Egypt under formal Zengid...