186:, panicked and massacred many of the inhabitants for fear of an uprising against them; they then destroyed as much of the city as they could and abandoned it. Sa'id took over control of the city, appointed one of his lieutenants as governor, and returned to Mosul. From there he launched a raid into Byzantine territory in November. Hasan regained Mosul in 934, but again Sa'id's intrigues at court caused him to lose it. As a result, Hasan had his uncle assassinated and fled to
20:
127:
after quarrelling with the vizier, and was executed in 918, but his brothers remained loyal to the
Abbasid government and were entrusted with senior positions. In 927/8, Sa'id and his brothers served in the caliphal army
686:
632:
190:, whence he returned in late 935 to become once more Mosul's governor. Consolidating his position, Hasan founded the practically independent Hamdanid emirate of Mosul, and ruled it until 967.
549:
768:
758:
527:
Prosopographie der mittelbyzantinischen Zeit Online. Berlin-Brandenburgische
Akademie der Wissenschaften. Nach Vorarbeiten F. Winkelmanns erstellt
178:) appointed him governor of Mosul, with the task of recovering the city. Setting out in October, Sa'id managed to break the Byzantine siege of
696:
753:
556:
645:
511:
638:
778:
467:
381:
748:
424:
450:
203:, freed after giving birth to her master's child), Sa'id was the father of the distinguished general and poet
86:
182:, before moving onto Melitene. The local Byzantine garrison, composed of followers of the Armenian general
97:, the Taghlibi leaders took advantage of the collapse of central caliphal authority during the decade-long
773:
137:
129:
763:
712:
542:
116:), the family was able to retain and consolidate its influence in the area thanks to Sa'id's brother
446:
503:
The
Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates: The Islamic Near East from the 6th to the 11th Century
215:, while his daughter Shakinah became the wife of Sayf al-Dawla and the mother of his successor,
208:
90:
43:
415:. In Ashtiany, Julia; Johnstone, T. M.; Latham, J. D.; Serjeant, R. B.; Smith, G. Rex (eds.).
412:
368:
691:
521:
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62:
8:
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147:
Along with his brother Abu'l-Sarja Nasr, Sa'id vied with his nephew Hasan, the future
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74:
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24:
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101:(861–870) to assert increasing control over their particular area, centred on
737:
666:
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458:
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212:
120:, who became a distinguished general in Abbasid service. Husayn rebelled in
82:
626:
525:
434:
168:
133:
19:
199:
534:
286:
179:
156:
105:. Despite the subsequent re-assertion of caliphal authority under
152:
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who served as provincial governor and military leader under the
657:
183:
151:, for control of Mosul. In 931, following the conquest of the
610:
102:
16:
Abbasid provincial governor and military leader (died c.935)
419:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 315–327.
524:; Ludwig, Claudia; Pratsch, Thomas; Zielke, Beate (2013).
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769:Assassinated people of the medieval Islamic world
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211:, served as a general under Nasir al-Dawla and
550:
530:(in German). Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter.
61:. He was the father of the celebrated poet
557:
543:
468:The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition
382:The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition
759:Abbasid people of the Arab–Byzantine wars
697:Abu'l-Fawaris Muhammad ibn Nasir al-Dawla
646:Abu Abdallah al-Husayn ibn Nasir al-Dawla
476:. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 119–120.
390:. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 126–131.
633:Abu'l-Muzzafar Hamdan ibn Nasir al-Dawla
410:
316:
18:
496:
265:
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736:
687:Abu'l-Hayja Abdallah ibn Sa'd al-Dawla
355:
340:
328:
280:
241:
538:
639:Abu Tahir Ibrahim ibn Nasir al-Dawla
564:
506:(Second ed.). Harlow: Longman.
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304:
93:. In a pattern repeated across the
38:
13:
754:Governors of the Abbasid Caliphate
14:
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520:
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396:10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_0259
292:
173:
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1:
222:
121:
81:. His family belonged to the
53:) was an early member of the
723:Ruling emirs are denoted in
68:
7:
411:El Tayib, Abdullah (1990).
295:, Saʻīd b. Ḥamdān (#26961).
49:
10:
795:
779:Abbasid governors of Mosul
349:
85:tribe, established in the
50:Abu ʿAlāʾ Saʿīd ibn Ḥamdān
721:
713:Nasir al-Dawla ibn Hamdan
705:
655:
608:
572:
749:10th-century Arab people
417:ʿAbbasid Belles-Lettres
73:Sa'id was a son of the
413:"Abū Firās al-Ḥamdānī"
39:ابو علاء سعيد بن حمدان
27:
522:Lilie, Ralph-Johannes
22:
331:, pp. 127, 129.
205:Abu Firas al-Hamdani
197:slave concubine (an
77:family's patriarch,
63:Abu Firas al-Hamdani
585:Abdallah ibn Hamdan
319:, pp. 315–316.
307:, pp. 119–120.
268:, pp. 266–267.
256:, pp. 265–266.
23:Family tree of the
774:History of Malatya
595:Ibrahim ibn Hamdan
451:Lévi-Provençal, E.
99:Anarchy at Samarra
28:
731:
730:
590:Husayn ibn Hamdan
580:Hamdan ibn Hamdun
513:978-0-582-40525-7
118:Husayn ibn Hamdan
95:Abbasid Caliphate
89:since before the
79:Hamdan ibn Hamdun
59:Abbasid Caliphate
47:
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764:Hamdanid dynasty
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31:Sa'id ibn Hamdan
25:Hamdanid dynasty
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207:. Another son,
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357:Canard, Marius
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283:, p. 127.
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246:
244:, p. 126.
226:
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176: 908–932
165:John Kourkouas
149:Nasir al-Dawla
140:from reaching
114: 892–902
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706:Later members
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674:Sa'd al-Dawla
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266:Kennedy 2004
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254:Kennedy 2004
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130:sent to stop
83:Banu Taghlib
72:
30:
29:
627:Abu Taghlib
463:Pellat, Ch.
455:Schacht, J.
439:"Abū Firās"
386:Volume III:
377:Schacht, J.
373:Pellat, Ch.
361:"Ḥamdānids"
341:Canard 1971
329:Canard 1971
281:Canard 1971
242:Canard 1971
169:al-Muqtadir
107:al-Mu'tadid
744:934 deaths
738:Categories
223:References
193:Through a
161:Byzantines
134:Qarmatians
125: 915
692:Abu Firas
490:495469456
472:Volume I:
459:Lewis, B.
404:495469525
365:Lewis, B.
305:Gibb 1960
200:umm walad
167:, Caliph
69:Biography
44:romanized
500:(2004).
465:(eds.).
437:(1960).
379:(eds.).
359:(1971).
180:Samosata
157:Melitene
75:Hamdanid
350:Sources
188:Armenia
159:by the
142:Baghdad
138:Bahrayn
46::
658:Aleppo
510:
488:
461:&
423:
402:
388:H–Iram
375:&
209:Husayn
184:Melias
163:under
87:Jazira
35:Arabic
611:Mosul
441:. In
363:. In
103:Mosul
725:bold
508:ISBN
486:OCLC
421:ISBN
400:OCLC
293:PmbZ
132:the
478:doi
474:A–B
392:doi
155:of
136:of
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122:c.
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