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The Mamluk Sultanate survived a little longer until 1517. Tuman Bay, whom al-Ghuri had left as deputy in Cairo, was hastily and unanimously proclaimed sultan on 10 October 1516. [191] [197] The emirs rejected his plan to confront the next Ottoman advance at Gaza, so instead he prepared a final defense at al-Raydaniyya to the north of Cairo. [191]
- Bahri Mamluks
The Bahri Mamluks (Arabic: المماليك البحرية, romanized:...
- Shajar ad-Durr
Shajar al-Durr (Arabic: شجر الدر, lit. 'Tree of Pearls'),...
- Second Ottoman–Mamluk War
The Ottoman–Mamluk War of 1516–1517 was the second major...
- List of Mamluk Sultans
The following is a list of Mamluk sultans.The Mamluk...
- History of the Mamluk Sultanate
Mamluk history is generally divided into the Turkish or...
- Bahri Mamluks
The Mamluk Sultanate survived in Egypt until 1517, when Selim captured Cairo on 20 January. Although not in the same form as under the Sultanate, the Ottoman Empire retained the Mamluks as an Egyptian ruling class and the Mamluks and the Burji family succeeded in regaining much of their influence, but as vassals of the Ottomans.
- 830s – 1811
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Jul 4, 2022 · Definition. Shajara al-Durr (r. 1250) was the founder of the Mamluk Dynasty in Egypt, and she was the first and only woman to sit on the Islamic Egyptian throne. She held the title of sultana for only 80 days but left a lasting mark through architectural monuments, which bear her symbol: a tree lined with mother of pearl and inlaid with gold.
When the plague reached Cairo, the Mamluk sultan An-Nasir Hasan fled the city and stayed in his residence Siryaqus outside of the city between the 25 September and 22 December, when the Black Death was present in Cairo. The Black Death in Cairo resulted in the death of 200.000 people, which were a third of the population of the city, and ...
Egypt - Mamluk, Ottoman, 1250-1800: During the Mamluk period Egypt became the unrivaled political, economic, and cultural centre of the eastern Arabic-speaking zone of the Muslim world. Symbolic of this development was the reestablishment in 1261 under the Mamluk rulers of the Abbasid caliphate—destroyed by the Mongols in their sack of Baghdad three years earlier—with the arrival in Cairo ...
Mar 28, 2011 · The New Cambridge History of Islam - November 2010 ... ‘ The general mortality of the Black Death in the Mamluk Empire ’, in ... ‘ The Baḥrī Mamluk sultanate ...