-
Shuja Kurankij ibn
Faradi was a
Daylamite military commander who
briefly became amir al-umara of the
Abbasid Caliphate in July–August 941.
Kurankij was...
- July
Kurankij was
appointed as amir al-umara by the
powerless caliph al-Muttaqi. On the same night, the Turk
Takinak was
arrested and drowned.
Kurankij chose...
- the
Daylamite chief named Kurankij became amir al-umara. Al-Muttaqi
appealed to Ibn Ra'iq for ****istance
against Kurankij. Ibn Ra'iq
marched on Baghdad...
-
disorder that
followed his
usurpation of power. A
Daylamite chief named Kurankij replaced him as de
facto ruler of Baghdad, but he
imposed tyrannical rule...
- south-western "Persian" type, but of the north-western type: thus Gōrāngēj (not
Kūrānkīj, as
originally interpreted)
corresponds to
Persian gōr-angēz "chaser of...
- al-Baridi as viziers, but the
military retook control under the
leadership of
Kurankij, who
became amir al-umara on 1 July. He was
deposed on 16
September by...
-
until an army
mutiny resulted in the
appointment of the
Daylamite leader Kurankij as amir al-umara (1 July). In the meantime,
following Bajkam's death, Tuzun...
-
Kurankij now
became amir al-umara, but his rule was also brief, as a
resurgent Ibn Ra'iq
entered Baghdad with his army in late
August 941.
Kurankij was...