- al-Din Abu
Abdallah Muhammad ibn Abi
Muhammad ibn
Muhammad ibn
Zafar al-
Siqilli (Arabic: حجة الدين أبو عبد الله محمد بن أبي محمد بن محمد بن ظفر الصقلي...
- romanized: Jawhar ibn ʿAbd Allāh,
better known as
Jawhar al
Siqilli, al-Qaid al-
Siqilli, "The
Sicilian General", or al-Saqlabi, "The Slav"; born in the...
- army
headed by
Jawhar al-
Siqilli at
Kolzum in 971 and
thereby captured the town.
Following his
defeat in
Cairo by al-
Siqilli at the end of that year,...
- time of
peace there following the
death of
conquering general Jawhar al-
Siqilli. He
apparently married, but the name of his wife is unknown. He and his...
- (c. 433–515 AH; c. AD 1041–1121), also
known simply as Ibn al-Qatta' al-
Siqilli (إبن القطّاع الصقلي), was a
renowned Arab philologist,
lexicographer and...
- The date of his
death is unknown. His
successor was the
slave Jawhar al-
Siqilli, who
would go on to
serve as a
distinguished military commander and conquer...
- much of
North Africa and
parts of the
Levant and the Hijaz.
Jawhar al-
Siqilli, the
general who
conquered Egypt for the Fatimids, was
ordered to construct...
- Bab Al-****uh "Islamic Cairo"
building was
named after Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah,
built by
Fatimid vizier Gawhar Al-
Siqilli, and
extended by Badr al-Jamali....
- but was repulsed. Only a
later attempt by the
Fatimid general Jawhar al-
Siqilli managed to
conquer Egypt in 969.
Ubayd Allah,
brother of
Muhammad ibn Tughj...
- ʿAbd al-Raḥīm ibn ʿAbd al-Razzāq ibn Jaʿfar ibn Bashrūn,
called al-
Ṣiqillī (the Sicilian), was an
Arabic poet from
Mahdia who
spent much of his life in...