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Ismail was born in Farghana in 849—he was the son of Ahmad ibn Asad, and had a brother named Nasr I, who ascended the Samanid throne in 864/5. During Nasr's reign, Ismail was sent to take control of Bukhara, which had been devastated by looting on the part of forces from Khwarezm. The citizens of the city welcomed Ismail, seeing him as ...
- August 892 – 24 November 907
- Ahmad ibn Asad
The Samanid Empire ( Persian: سامانیان, romanized : Sāmāniyān ), also known as the Samanian Empire, Samanid dynasty, Samanid amirate, or simply as the Samanids, was a Persianate Sunni Muslim empire, of Iranian dehqan origin. The empire was centred in Khorasan and Transoxiana; at its greatest extent encompassing northeastern Iran and ...
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Ismoil Somoni Peak, Formerly Stalin Peak and Communism Peak, the highest mountain in the former Soviet Union territories is now called after Ismoil Somoni or Ismail Samani (d. 907), leader of the Samani dynasty which conquered the region now known as the country of Tajikistan in which the mountain rises to a heigh of 7,495m (24,590 ft).
- 7,495 m (24,590 ft), Ranked 50th
- Pamirs
- 3 September 1933 by Yevgeniy Abalakov and Nikolay Gorbunov.
Dirrã de Ismail Samani cunhado em Osruxana em 893-894 (280 A.H.) Emir do Império Samânida; Reinado agosto de 892-24 de novembro de 907: Antecessor(a) Nácer I: Sucessor(a) Amade Samani Nascimento maio de 849 Fergana: Morte 24 de novembro de 907 Bucara: Sepultado em Mausoléu Samânida, Bucara: Descendência Amade Samani: Dinastia samânida Pai
Samanid Mausoleum. Coordinates: 39°46′37″N 64°24′02″E. General view of the mausoleum. Exterior view of the mausoleum. The Samanid Mausoleum is a mausoleum located in the northwestern part of Bukhara, Uzbekistan, just outside its historic center. It was built in the 10th century CE as the resting place of the powerful and influential ...
The city rose to prominence under the Samanids, a Persian dynasty, ruling over northeastern Iran and western Central Asia from 819 to 1005 in service of the distant. Caliph, the nominal head of the Islamic world, in Baghdad, the Samanids were effectively independent. Under Ismail (who ruled from 892–907), the domains of the Samanids expanded ...
Coin of Ahmad Samani. Ahmad ibn Ismail (Persian: احمد سامانی; died 24 January 914) was amir of the Samanids (907–914). He was the son of Ismail Samani. He was known as the "Martyred Amir". Biography. Ahmad is first mentioned in the early 900s, when he was appointed as the governor of Gurgan.