-
Subsequent leaders of the
family descend from the
eldest son,
Furtun. His son, Musa ibn
Furtun ibn Qasi,
first garnered notice in 788, when on
behalf of emir...
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Fortuny y
Madrazo (Catalan: Marià
Fortuny i de Madrazo,
pronounced [məɾiˈa
fuɾˈtuɲ i ðə məˈðɾaθu]; 11 May 1871 – 3 May 1949) was a
Spanish polymath, artist...
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Fortuny (Eastern Calatan: [
fuɾˈtuɲ]) is a
surname of
Catalan origin. It may
refer to:
Diego Fortuny (born 1991),
Argentine rugby union player José Manuel...
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converted to
Islam after the
Muslim conquest of Iberia. His father, Musa ibn
Furtun, may be the man who was ********inated in the late 8th century, of necessity...
- was
nonetheless able to rout the men of al-Tawil and
capture his
brother Furtun. In 898, the
death of
Muhammad ibn Lubb al-Qasawi
while besieging Zaragoza...
- ibn al-Tawil
Furtun ibn al-Tawil Musa
Aznar ibn al-Tawil
Yahya ibn al-Tawil Lubb ibn al-Tawil
Walid ibn al-Tawil Abd al-Malik ibn
Furtun Abd al-Malik...
-
allied Christian troops emerging victorious and
routing the
Cordovan forces.
Furtun ibn
Muhammad al-Tawil, wali of Huesca,
withheld his
troops from the battle...
- ibn al-Tawil
Furtun ibn al-Tawil Musa
Aznar ibn al-Tawil
Yahya ibn al-Tawil Lubb ibn al-Tawil
Walid ibn al-Tawil Abd al-Malik ibn
Furtun Abd al-Malik...
- who
would control some of the
family properties in the 910s and 920s; and
Furtun ibn Lubb, who was
expelled from
Larida after his father's
death and converted...
- the son of Musa ibn Musa al-Qasawi and his wife
Maymuna bint
Zahir ibn
Furtun, who was Musa's uncle. For some years, he
lived in Córdoba as an hostage-guest...