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" Ayyūbids - Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE "
Eddé, Anne-Marie
Document Type
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AL
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Language of Document
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English
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Record Number
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1060812
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Doc. NO
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ALei1209
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Main Entry
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Eddé, Anne-Marie
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Title & Author
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Ayyūbids - Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE\ Eddé, Anne-Marie
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Publication Statement
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Leiden: Brill
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Title of Periodical
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Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE
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Note
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(7,335 words)
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Abstract
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The Ayyūbids were a dynasty founded by Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn b. Ayyūb (Saladin), which ruled Egypt, Muslim Syria-Palestine, the greater part of Upper Mesopotamia, and Yemen from the end of the sixth/twelfth to the middle of the seventh/thirteenth century. 1. The history of a dynasty The family’s eponym, Ayyūb b. Shādhī, whose ancestors are unknown, was born in a village near Dwin (Dvin), in Armenia. He belonged to the Rawwādī clan of the Kurdish Hadhbānī tribe and, at the beginning of the sixth/twelfth century, entered
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Subject
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Islam.
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electronic file name
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ALei1209.pdf
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