-
kingmakers consisted of
eight emirs,
chief among whom were
emirs Yalbugha and
Taybugha al-Tawil.
Their decision to
appoint al-Mansur Muhammad, a
grandson Sultan...
-
retaking Mosul but was
murdered by his
subordinate Huseyn b.
Taybugha in 1351.
Huseyn b.
Taybugha himself was
later murdered two
years later by his subordinate...
- the
founder of the
Taybughid dynasty,
Taybugha Biy, came from Bukhara, and was the son of a
ruler there.
Taybugha Biy
brought a
number of
religious scholars...
- for
didactic purposes. The best
known versified treatise is the one by
Taybugha al-Ashrafi al-Baklamishi al-Yunan ("the Gr****"), who in c. 1368
wrote the...
- 1295) al-Yunini,
Kitab fi ma'rifat 'ilm ramy al-siham (c. 1317–1324)
Taybugha al-Baklamishi,
Ghunyat al-tullab fi ma'rifat al-ramy bi-l-nushshab (1368/9)...
- (commander in chief). His
power was
tempered by the
other senior emirs,
namely Taybugha al-Tawil.
During these years,
Yalbugha built up an
enormous mamluk household...
- (second ed.). Evanston, IL: Paul E. Klopsteg. l-Ashrafi l-Maklamishi l-Yunani,
Taybugha (1368).
Kitab ghunyat at-tullab fi
marifat ramy an-mushshab [Saracen Archery...
- of the
vizier Mājid ibn al-Qazwīna,
while construction was
overseen by
Ṭaybughā and Bahāʾ al-Dīn ibn al-Muf****ar.
According to al-Maqrizi, the craftsmen...
- (2007). "Ibn al‐Majdī: Shihāb al‐Dīn Abū al‐ʿAbbās Aḥmad ibn
Rajab ibn
Ṭaybughā al‐Majdī al‐Shāfiʿī". In
Thomas Hockey; et al. (eds.). The Biographical...