-
individual Buyid members to take
control of a
province and
begin ruling there. The
following list is incomplete.
Buyids in
Basra Diya' al-Dawla (980s)
Buyids in...
-
northwest Indian subcontinent from 977 to 1186.
Buyid dynasty, also
known as the
Buyid Empire or the
Buyids (Persian: بوییان Buyiān, Caspian: Bowyiyün),...
-
taken over by the
Buyids.
Although the
Buyids were pro-Shi'a, they had
retained the
Abbasid caliphate for
reasons of legitimacy. The
Buyids ruled Iraq ostensibly...
- with the
Buyids already since the time of al-Muktafi's accession.
Medieval sources tended to
justify this
change on
religious grounds. The
Buyids and their...
- Khuzistan,
which was
still under caliphal control, in
order to
sever the
Buyids from the Caliphate. This
invasion prompted the
caliph to
reach an agreement...
-
political power of the
caliphs was
limited with the rise of the
Iranian Buyids and the
Seljuq Turks, who
captured Baghdad in 945 and 1055, respectively...
-
expelled by the
Buyid ruler Adud al-Dawla in 980,
because he gave
refuge to the latter's
rival and
brother Fakhr al-Dawla. The
Buyids now
dominated Tabaristan...
- the
major dynasties of the
period as the Tahirids, Saffarids, Ziyarids,
Buyids, and Samanids.
Daryaee also
includes the Ghaznavids,
omitted by Mahendrarajah...
-
battle lasted for
several months; it
eventually ended in
victory for the
Buyids, who
expelled the
Hamdanids from
Baghdad with a
major offensive and secured...
- unsolved. The
Buyids had
difficulty adjusting to Baghdad; Mu'izz al-Dawla
almost left the city in
favor of Ahvaz. The
enemies of the
Buyids, such as the...