55:. During their early period, the family held much influence over the districts of Shukur, Ranikuh and Ashkawar in Tabaristan. The first member of the family was a certain Nu'man, who had two sons named
79:. Both of these sons would later play an important role in the politics of northern Iran. Makan later managed to make the Alid ruler his puppet, and make Tabaristan part of his domains.
110:
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from the Buyids, but was defeated, and thereafter disappears from history chronicles. Al-Hasan managed to survive the struggle, and had two sons named
102:
101:, claimed suzerainty over Tabaristan, which in the end resulted in Makan getting killed in 940 by a Samanid army. Makan had a son named
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36:
170:
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64:
144:, who served as a Buyid military officer. After this, the family disappears from history chronicles.
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8:
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invasion of
Tabaristan. Both of the slain brothers had a son; Kaki had a son named
98:
28:
140:, and was imprisoned. The fate of his brother is unknown. Nasr had a son named
121:
95:
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163:
The
Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 4: From the Arab Invasion to the Saljuqs
225:
183:
E.J. Brill's first encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936, Volume V: L–Moriscos
125:
180:
Nazim, M. (1987). "Mākān b. Kākī". In
Houtsma, Martijn Theodoor (ed.).
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32:
204:
The
Monumental Inscriptions from Early Islamic Iran and Transoxiana
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87:
52:
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fortress. Nasr later fell out of favor from the
Ziyarid ruler
137:
165:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 198–249.
132:in ca. 970, which would later become an important
223:
67:. In 902, both of them were killed during a
39:, and at their greatest extent ruled all of
124:, Firuzan ruled Daylam, while Nasr ruled
153:
224:
159:"The Minor Dynasties of Northern Iran"
200:
179:
186:. Leiden: BRILL. pp. 164–165.
13:
82:However, other Daylamites such as
14:
243:
128:. Nasr is said to have built the
75:, while Fairuzan had a son named
65:Alid dynasties of northern Iran
1:
46:
7:
120:According to the historian
105:, who later tried to seize
10:
248:
147:
86:, including the Daylamite
207:. BRILL. pp. 1–307.
51:The family was native to
77:Al-Hasan ibn al-Fairuzan
161:. In Frye, R.N. (ed.).
63:, whom both served the
16:Iranian princely family
201:Blair, Sheila (1992).
111:Firuzan ibn al-Hasan
35:origin which ruled
31:princely family of
172:978-0-521-20093-6
142:Hazarasp ibn Nasr
115:Nasr ibn al-Hasan
84:Asfar ibn Shiruya
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99:Samanid dynasty
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122:Ibn Isfandiyar
73:Makan ibn Kaki
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155:Madelung, W.
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232:Firuzanids
94:, and the
41:Tabaristan
27:) were an
25:Perozanids
21:Firuzanids
103:Ibn Makan
47:Biography
33:Daylamite
226:Category
157:(1975).
92:Ziyarids
61:Fairuzan
148:Sources
134:Ismaili
130:Shahdiz
107:Isfahan
96:Persian
69:Samanid
29:Iranian
211:
190:
169:
88:Buyids
53:Daylam
37:Shukur
138:Qabus
126:Qumis
209:ISBN
188:ISBN
167:ISBN
113:and
90:and
59:and
57:Kaki
19:The
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23:(
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