- (English: Martin).
Among Mozarabs, the name was
Arabized to "
Mardanish" (e.g. Ibn
Mardanish) (as well as
other patronymics such as
Hernandez and Gomez)...
-
independent again in 1145. From 1147 to 1172, it was
under the
control of Ibn
Mardanish,
after which it was
annexed by the Almohads. When the
Almohads retreated...
- Abū ʿAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn Saʿd ibn Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad ibn
Mardanīsh,
called al-Judhāmī or al-Tujībī (born AD 1124 or 1125 [AH 518], died AD 1172 [AH...
- Ibn
Mardanish may
refer to Abu ʿAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn Saʿd ibn
Mardanīsh (died 1172),
ruler of
Murcia Zayyan ibn
Mardanish (died 1270),
ruler of Valencia...
- control. As the
Almoravid empire crumbled in the mid 12th-century, ibn
Mardanīsh took
control of
eastern al-Andalus,
creating a Murcia-centred independent...
-
October 1165
between the
invading Almohads and the king of Murcia, Ibn
Mardanīsh. An
Almohad army
under sayyids Abū Ḥafṣ ʿUmar and Abū Saʿīd ʿUthmān, the...
-
Zayyan ibn
Mardanish or Zayán Ibn
Mardanix (b. ?, Onda – d. 1270, Tunisia) also
known as Zahén or Çaèn, was the last king of the
Taifa of
Valencia before...
- the
forces of the
Taifa of Valencia,
under the
command of
Zayyan ibn
Mardanish. The
battle resulted in a
decisive Aragonese victory and the conquest...
- son-in-law Ibn
Mardanīsh (the so-called 'Wolf King') in the latter's
resistance efforts against the Almohads. He betra**** Ibn
Mardanīsh later in his life...
-
relatively unopposed,
except Valencia,
where he was
opposed by
Zayyan ibn
Mardanish. S****ing to
legitimise his rule, Ibn Hud
pledged allegiance to the Abbasid...