- al-Dawla Sayf al-Dīn Abū Saʿīd
Āqsunqur al-Bursuqī (قسیم الدوله سیف الدین ابو سعید آقسنقر البرسقی), also
known as
Aqsunqur al-Bursuqi,
Aqsonqor il-Bursuqi...
- The
Aqsunqur Mosque (Arabic: مسجد آق, Turkish:
Aksungur Camii; also
known as the Blue
Mosque (Arabic: الجامع الأزرق, Turkish: Mavi Cami) or the Mosque...
-
Jawali Saqawa (1106–1109), then
Mawdud (1109–1113), and from 1114,
under Aqsunqur al-Bursuqi.
Zengi remained in
Mosul until 1118, when he
entered into the...
- in a
Crusader withdrawal following the
arrival of a
relief force led by
Aqsunqur al-Bursuqi.
Located in the
Syrian steppes,
Aleppo was an
important center...
-
Mosul (1113),
Fatimid vizier Al-Afdal
Shahanshah (1121),
Seljuk atabeg Aqsunqur al-Bursuqi (1126),
Fatimid caliph al-Amir bi-Ahkami’l-Lah (1130), Taj al-Mulk...
-
capital after defeating an army of 4,000
Turks led by the
atabeg of Arran,
Aqsunqur Ahmadili,
which was on its way to help
Mahmud II. Once he had laid siege...
-
middle of a fast and died
later that day. He was
succeeded as
atabeg by
Aqsunqur al-Bursuqi, his
representative at Baghdad.
Maalouf 1984, p. 87. Grousset...
- decoration. One of the few
early marble minbars of
Mamluk Cairo is
found in the
Aqsunqur Mosque in
Cairo (circa 1347). Its
marble surfaces are
decorated with other...
- 1124–1125, but was not
conquered after receiving protection by
forces of
Aqsunqur al
Bursuqi arriving from
Mosul in
January 1125. In 1128,
Aleppo became...
-
historical sources name as
either 'Ala al-Din
Aqsunqur al-Kamili (a
mamluk of
Sultan al-Kamil) or 'Ala al-Din
Aqsunqur al-Saqi al-'Adili (a
mamluk of
Sultan al-Adil)...