- (Kasravi, Bosworth, W. Madelung, J. Boris) and
began to use
Kurdish forms like
Mamlan for
Muhammad and
Ahmadil for
Ahmad as
their names. The
local poet Qatran...
- Abu Nasr
Mamlan II (also
spelled Muhammad II) was the last
Rawadid amir (ruler) of
Azarbaijan from 1058/9 to 1071. He was the son and
successor of Abu...
-
succeeded by his son Abu Nasr
Mamlan II (r. 1058/59–1070).
Wahsudan was a son of the
Rawadid amir (ruler) Abu'l-Hayja
Mamlan I. Wahsudan's
accession date...
- of
Adharbayjan from 1001 to 1025. A son of the
Rawadid amir Abu'l-Hayja
Mamlan I, Abu Nasr
Husayn II's
regnal period is
disputed in scholarship. According...
- of Tabriz, Abu
Mansur Wahsudan (r. 1019–1059) and his
successor Abu Nasr
Mamlan II (r. 1058/9–1070), as well as the
Shaddadid rulers of Ganja, Abu'l-Aswar...
- alt2) ·
JSTOR (alt) · LCCN (alt) MIAR · NLM (alt) · Scopus · W&L
CODEN MAMLAN ISSN 0025-1461 (print) 1864-1547 (web) OCLC no. 01449590
Links Journal homepage...
-
during the
Seljuk period. In the 11th century, the
Rawadid ruler Abu'l-Hayja
Mamlan I and his son, Abu
Mansur Wahsudan were
buried in the mausoleum. The mausoleum...
-
local Kurdish families,
giving themselves common Kurdish names such as
Mamlan. The
Ottoman historian Münejjim
Bashi (d. 1702), who
based his work on the...
-
raided Akhlat,
another important stronghold of this
Kurdish dynasty, in 997.
Mamlan, the
Rawadid emir of Azarbaijan, was also
twice defeated, the
second time...
- 1037–1063). In 1070,
Tughril arrested Wahsudan's son and
successor Abu Nasr
Mamlan II (r. 1058/9–1070) and
incorporated Azerbaijan into his domain, thus marking...