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- Al-Madharai abstract "The al-Madhara'i were a family of officials from Iraq who served as and virtually monopolized the posts of director of finances (‘āmil) of Egypt and Syria for the Tulunid dynasty, the Abbasid Caliphate, and the Ikhshidid dynasty, between 879 and 946. In this role, they amassed "one of the largest personal fortunes in the medieval Arab east" (Th. Bianquis).As its nisba shows, the family hailed from the village of Madharaya near Wasit in lower Iraq. The first member to rise to prominence was Abu Bakr Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Madhara'i, who in 879 was named controller of finances by the autonomous ruler of Egypt and Syria, Ahmad ibn Tulun (reigned 868–884), a post he kept until his death in 884. He named his sons Ali and Abu Ali al-Husayn as his representatives in Egypt and Syria respectively. Ali succeeded his father and became vizier under Khumarawayh ibn Ahmad ibn Tulun (r. 884–896) and during the brief reign of Jaysh ibn Khumarawayh, along with whom he as murdered in 896. He was in turn succeeded as fiscal director by his son Abu'l-Tayyib Ahmad (died 915), while another son, Abu Bakr Muhammad served as vizier to the penultimate Tulunid ruler, Harun ibn Khumarawayh (r. 896–904).Following the end of the Tulunid dynasty and the re-imposition of direct Abbasid control over their domains in 904–5, many of the family and its followers were deported to Baghdad, but al-Husayn, who had maintained contacts with the Abbasid court, was appointed in charge of the Egyptian finances. The family now became involved in factional struggles between the leading bureaucratic factions in Baghdad, siding with the opposition to the Banu'l-Furat clan. Its fortunes fluctuated as a result. In 913, al-Husayn was moved once more to Syria, while his nephew Abu Bakr Muhammad took over in Egypt, but both were dismissed in 917. Al-Husayn again served as financial director of Egypt in 919–922, and for a third and final time (along with Syria) from 926 until his death in 929. The last important representative of the family, al-Husayn's nephew Abu Bakr Muhammad, took over the direction of Egyptian finances in 930–933, under the governorship of his friend Takin al-Khazari. In 936 he tried without success to oppose the takeover of Egypt by Muhammad ibn Tughj, and was imprisoned. Released in 939, he played a leading role in the governance of the new Ikhshidid state until his dismissal in 946, after Ibn Tughj's death. He retired into private life, and died in 957.".
- Al-Madharai wikiPageExternalLink al-ma-d-h-ara-i-SIM_4729.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q&f=false.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageID "46250252".
- Al-Madharai wikiPageLength "4173".
- Al-Madharai wikiPageOutDegree "31".
- Al-Madharai wikiPageRevisionID "683656088".
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Abbasid.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Abbasid_Caliphate.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Abu_Ali_al-Husayn_ibn_Ahmad_al-Madharai.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Abu_Bakr_Ahmad_ibn_Ibrahim_al-Madharai.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Abu_Bakr_Muhammad_ibn_Ali_al-Madharai.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Abu_l-Asakir_Jaysh_ibn_Khumarawayh.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Abul-Tayyib_Ahmad_ibn_Ali_al-Madharai.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Ahmad_ibn_Tulun.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Ali_ibn_Ahmad_al-Madharai.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Baghdad.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Banul-Furat.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Bilad_al-Sham.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Category:Al-Madharai_family.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Category:Egypt_under_the_Abbasid_Caliphate.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_of_the_Tulunid_dynasty.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Egypt_in_the_Middle_Ages.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Harun_ibn_Khumarawayh.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Ikhshidid.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Ikhshidid_dynasty.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Iraq.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Jaysh_ibn_Khumarawayh.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Khumarawayh_ibn_Ahmad_ibn_Tulun.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Medieval_Egypt.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Muhammad_ibn_Tughj.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Muhammad_ibn_Tughj_al-Ikhshid.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Nisba_(onomastics).
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Takin_al-Khazari.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Tulunid_dynasty.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Tulunids.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Vizier.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Wasit.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLink Wasit,_Iraq.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLinkText "al-Madhara'i".
- Al-Madharai wikiPageWikiLinkText "dynasty of bureaucrats".
- Al-Madharai hasPhotoCollection Al-Madharai.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_encyclopedia.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Al-Madharai wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Sfn.
- Al-Madharai subject Category:Al-Madharai_family.
- Al-Madharai subject Category:Egypt_under_the_Abbasid_Caliphate.
- Al-Madharai subject Category:People_of_the_Tulunid_dynasty.
- Al-Madharai hypernym Family.
- Al-Madharai comment "The al-Madhara'i were a family of officials from Iraq who served as and virtually monopolized the posts of director of finances (‘āmil) of Egypt and Syria for the Tulunid dynasty, the Abbasid Caliphate, and the Ikhshidid dynasty, between 879 and 946. In this role, they amassed "one of the largest personal fortunes in the medieval Arab east" (Th. Bianquis).As its nisba shows, the family hailed from the village of Madharaya near Wasit in lower Iraq.".
- Al-Madharai label "Al-Madhara'i".
- Al-Madharai sameAs Al-Madharai.
- Al-Madharai sameAs Famxc3xadlia_al-Madharai.
- Al-Madharai sameAs m.013184b9.
- Al-Madharai sameAs Q11904642.
- Al-Madharai sameAs Q11904642.
- Al-Madharai wasDerivedFrom Al-Madharaioldid=683656088.
- Al-Madharai isPrimaryTopicOf Al-Madharai.