- he was
bought by Alp-Tegin,
himself a
slave and a
prominent commander.
Sebuktigin quickly became integrated in the
Persian community around him, despite...
-
Ghaznavid Sebuktigin took power. In
compiling his
Tabaqat i Nasiri,
Juzjani used
other books now lost; part of Baihaqi's
reign of
Sebuktigin, Abu'l-Qasim...
- hold out for long, he
contacted the
Ghaznavids for help. The
Ghaznavid Sebuktigin made his way to Sistan, but
Khalaf managed to
bribe him and eventually...
-
married Sebüktigin's daughter,
while Mahmud married one of Abu'l Haret's daughters. Meanwhile, the
Samanids began to
quickly decline.
Sebüktigin later died...
- embellished,
flowery rhetorical rhymed prose, is a
history of the
reigns of
Sebuktigin and Mahmud.
Written by the
historian Abu Nasr
Muhammad ibn
Muhammad al...
-
buildings and
bazaars sprang around the shrine. In 383 A.H. / 993 A.D.,
Sebuktigin, the
Ghaznavid sultan devastated Mashhad and
stopped the
pilgrims from...
-
defeated and
captured in 998 at the
Battle of Ghazni. In 998, Mahmud, son of
Sebuktigin,
succeeded to the governorship, and
Ghazni and the
Ghaznavid dynasty became...
-
Ghaznavids and
invaded their capital city of
Ghazni both in the
reign of
Sebuktigin and in that of his son Mahmud,
which initiated the
Muslim Ghaznavid and...
- maint:
archived copy as
title (link) Bosworth, C.E. (1991). "Mahmud bin
Sebuktigin".
Encyclopedia of Islam. VI. E.J.Brill. Bosworth, C.
Edmund (2012). "Maḥmud...
- Afghanistan) in Sistan, he
served in the
chancery of the
Ghaznavid Amirs Sebuktigin and his son and
successor Mahmud. Abu al-Fath was,
amongst others, a student...