Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Said_Nasser_Eddin_BarakaAl-Said Barakah - Wikipedia

    Al-Said Barakah (1260–1280; original name: Muhammed Barakah Qan (Arabic: محمد بركة قان), royal name: al-Malik al-Said Nasir al-Din Barakah (الملك السعيد ناصر الدين بركة) was an Egyptian Mamluk Sultan who ruled from 1277 to 1279 after the death of his father Baibars.

  2. Al-Said Barakah (1260–1280; original name: Muhammed Barakah Qan (Arabic: محمد بركة قان), royal name: al-Malik al-Said Nasir al-Din Barakah (الملك السعيد ناصر الدين بركة) was an Egyptian Mamluk Sultan who ruled from 1277 to 1279 after the death of his father Baibars.

  3. Al-Said Barakah (1260–1280; original name: Muhammed Barakah Qan (Arabic: محمد بركة قان), royal name: al-Malik al-Said Nasir al-Din Barakah (الملك السعيد ناصر الدين بركة) was a Mamluk Sultan who ruled from 1277 to 1279 after the death of his father Baibars.

  4. Al-Said Barakah Mamluk Sultan of Egypt 1277-1279. Upload media Wikipedia. Date of birth: 1260 Cairo: ... Media in category "Al-Said Barakah"

    • Overview
    • Biography

    al-Said Barakah (1260-1279) was Sultan of Mameluke Egypt from 1277 to 1279, succeeding Baibars and preceding Solamish.

    al-Said Barakah was born in Cairo, Egypt in 1260, the son of Baibars. He succeeded his father in 1277, and he promoted his own Mamelukes to key positions before sending Qalawun and Baysari to raid Armenian Cilicia with 10,000 troops each. He planned to arrest both of the powerful generals on their return, but they were warned of the plan and return...

  5. Mamluk Sultan of Egypt 1277-1279. This page was last edited on 10 June 2024, at 10:22. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BaybarsBaybars - Wikipedia

    She was the daughter of Barka Khan a former Khwarazmian amir. She was the mother of his son Al-Said Barakah. [73] She died in 1284–85. [72] Another wife was the daughter Karmun Agha, a Mongol Amir. [74] He had three sons al-Said Barakah, Solamish and Khizir. [71] He had seven daughters; [71] one of them was named Tidhkarbay Khatun. [75]

  1. People also search for