Arama sonuçları
Bu vikide "Assassinated Egyptian people" sayfasını oluştur! Ayrıca bulunan arama sonuçlarını görün.
- ...e came to be known in historiography as the Golden Horde or the ''ulus'' ("people" or "patrimony") of ''Djochi'', while the contemporaries simply referred to ...h flourished from the mid-13th century to the end of the 14th century. The people of the Golden Horde were mainly a mixture of Turkic and Uralic peoples and72 KB (10.914 kelime) - 18:09, 25 Mart 2017
- ...wever, were given some form of exile. The anti-Möngke plot of an [[Uyghur people|Uyghur]] [[scribe]], Bala, and the Idiqut Salindi (the monarch of the Uyghu ...the king and the [[Choe]] clan retainer [[Kim Jun]] staged a counter-coup, assassinated the head of the Choe family, and sued for peace. When the Goryeo court sent40 KB (6.366 kelime) - 18:12, 26 Mart 2017
- ...isorders that tainted it. We have conquered vast areas, massacring all the people. You cannot escape from the terror of our armies. Where can you flee? What ...forces.<ref>Morgan, p. 137.</ref> In an unusual move, they agreed that the Egyptian Mamluks could march north through the Crusader territories unmolested, and19 KB (2.958 kelime) - 18:46, 26 Mart 2017
- ...ri Dynasty 1250 - 1382 (AD).PNG|thumb|400px|The [[Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)|Egyptian Mamluk Sultanate]] during the '''Bahri Mamluks'''.]] ...[[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] origin that ruled the [[Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)|Egyptian Mamluk Sultanate]] from 1250 to 1382. They followed the [[Ayyubids|Ayyubid24 KB (3.209 kelime) - 18:48, 26 Mart 2017
- |common_languages = [[Arabic language|Arabic]] <small>([[Egyptian Arabic|Egyptian]] and [[Classical Arabic|Classical]])</small><ref name=HNK>Rabbat 2001, p. ...existence, at its height the sultanate represented the zenith of medieval Egyptian and Levantine political, economic, and cultural glory in the Islamic era.<r113 KB (16.929 kelime) - 19:05, 26 Mart 2017
- ...success against the Mongols in the key [[Battle of Ain Jalut]]. Qutuz was assassinated by a fellow Mamluk leader, [[Baibars]], on the triumphant return journey to ...ls]] and sold as a slave, he traveled to [[Syria]] where he was sold to an Egyptian slave merchant who then sold him to [[Aybak]], the Mamluk sultan in [[Cairo29 KB (4.745 kelime) - 19:07, 26 Mart 2017
- ...Crusade]] of King [[Louis IX of France]]. He also led the vanguard of the Egyptian army at the [[Battle of Ain Jalut]] in 1260,<ref>The New Encyclopædia Brit ...all which was typical in both Arabic and European descriptions of [[Turkic people|Turkic]] men, and had a [[cataract]] in one of his eyes.32 KB (5.052 kelime) - 19:08, 26 Mart 2017
- ...p. 87-95</ref><ref>Thomas Philipp, Ulrich Haarmann (eds), ''The Mamluks in Egyptian Politics and Society.'' (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), pp. ...this did not succeed in calming tensions. The caliph [[al-Mutawakkil]] was assassinated by some of these slave-soldiers in 861 (see [[Anarchy at Samarra]]).<ref>D.48 KB (6.912 kelime) - 20:13, 26 Mart 2017
- ...80,000 people) to Hungary (to escape from the Mongols), where he was later assassinated by the Hungarian and Germans in concert. The Cumans then left Hungary, pill *Sevinch, Dagestan - went, with 40,000 people, and the family of Artvin Trabzon, to the Byzantine Empire.33 KB (5.079 kelime) - 15:06, 25 Mayıs 2017