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20:
161:, but after Abu Mansur Muhammad suffered a setback he retreated, allowing Daysam to take control of the province. Marzuban escaped from the Buyids in 953 and sought to regain his territory. Daysam was defeated by a Sallarid army near Ardabil, and the Daylamite leaders deserted from his side. He fled to
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in 955/956 as a
Hamdanid vassal. Marzuban expelled from there, and Daysam again found refuge with the Ardzrunids of Vaspurakan. The Ardzunid king, however, facing threats from Marzuban, seized Daysam and handed him over to the Sallarid. Daysam was blinded and imprisoned. He was killed by some of
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and invited Daysam to return to the province. When he arrived at the city he gained the support of the Kurds. His army was defeated by
Marzuban's, however, and the Sallarid besieged him in Tabriz. At this point Ja'far abandoned Daysam again, but Daysam managed to escape from Tabriz and enter
142:. Marzuban was not far behind and he laid siege to Ardabil. Eventually Daysam's new vizier, who had been bribed by the Sallarids, convinced Daysam to surrender. Daysam was treated with leniency by Marzuban, who gave him his castle in Tarum after he requested it.
126:) to take Adharbayjan from Daysam. Daysam met Marzuban's army on the field by his Daylamite mercenaries (whom he had hired to counterbalance the power of his unruly Kurdish troops) defected to the Sallarid and he was forced to flee to the court of the
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After the Buyids made peace with the
Sallarids, Daysam realized that he could not count on them for help in regaining Adharbayjan. He therefore left them for the
209:
Vladimir, Minorsky. "Studies in
Caucasian History: I. New Light on the Shaddadids of Ganja II. The Shaddadids of Ani III. Prehistory of Saladin": 113.
509:
270:"Minor dynasties of northern Iran". In Frye, Richard N. (ed.). The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 4: From the Arab Invasion to the Saljuqs
89:. With Kurdish support he managed to take over Adharbayjan by 938. His position in Adharbayjan was soon threatened by Lashkari ibn Mardi, a
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sent Daysam to
Adharbayjan to protect Sallarid interests there. Abu Mansur Muhammad's approach forced Daysam to retreat to
133:. Ja'far ibn 'Ali became Marzuban's vizier after he conquered Adharbayjan, but soon feared for his position. He went to
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165:, where he was given aid by the Christians. A year later, however, he was expelled from Armenia; he made his way to
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In 941 or 942 Daysam's vizier, Abu'l-Qasim Ja'far ibn 'Ali, fled due to an intrigue against him to the
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army expelled Daysam from
Adharbayjan, but he was able to recover the province with the help of the
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440:"On the coinage of Daysam ibn Ibrahïm in Adharbayjān and Armenia in the 10th century AD"
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between 938 and 955 during the power struggle that ensured after the fall of the
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The
Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 4: From the Arab Invasion to the Saljuqs
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372:. London and New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 172–173.
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246:(Volume 4 ed.). Brill Publishers. 1913–1936. p. 1137.
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Encyclopædia
Iranica, Volume VII/2: Dastūr al-Afāżel–Dehqān I
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or
Kurdish father, who rose to prominence while serving the
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A History of Sharvān and Darband in the 10th-11th Centuries
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Marzuban's supporters after the latter's death in 957.
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Occasional Kurdish ruler of Adharbayjan between 938–955
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273:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 232.
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390:(1975). "Minor dynasties of northern Iran". In
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26:minted under the name of Daysam at
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402:Cambridge University Press
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515:10th century in Iran
404:. pp. 198–250.
40:) (d. c. 957) was a
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151:Abu Mansur Muhammad
87:Yusuf ibn Abi'l-Saj
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453:: 11–19.
422:(1958).
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28:Bardha‘a
394:(ed.).
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