Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 76 of
76
with 100 triples per page.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun abstract "Ismat ad-Din was also the name of the Mamluk sultana more commonly known as Shajar al-Durr.ʿIṣmat ad-Dīn Khātūn (Arabic: عصمة الدين خاتون; died January 26, 1186), also known as Asimat, was the daughter of Mu'in ad-Din Unur, regent of Damascus, and wife of two of the greatest Muslim generals of the 12th century, Nur ad-Din Zangi and Saladin.Ismat ad-Din is a laqab (the descriptive part of an Arabic name) meaning \"purity of the faith\"; Khatun is an honorific meaning \"lady\" or \"noblewoman\". Her given name (ism) is unknown. Her father became regent of Damascus in 1138, and ruled the city on behalf of a series of young emirs of the Burid dynasty. During this time, Damascus's chief rivals to the north, Aleppo and Mosul, were united under the rule of the Zengid dynasty. Damascus had maintained an unsteady alliance with the crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem, but in 1147, Mu'in ad-Din negotiated an alliance with the Zengid emir of Aleppo, Nur ad-Din, who married Ismat ad-Din as part of the agreement. The next year, the Second Crusade besieged Damascus, and Mu'in ad-Din was forced to recognize Nur ad-Din, who had come to his rescue against the crusaders, as overlord of the city. Ismat ad-Din Khatun's father died in 1149 and her husband gained complete control over Damascus by 1154.When Nur ad-Din died in 1174, King Amalric I of Jerusalem took advantage of the situation and besieged the city of Banias. Ismat offered him a bribe to lift the siege, but, hoping for a larger offer, Amalric continued the siege for two weeks, until finally accepting the money along with the release of twenty Christian prisoners. William of Tyre describes Ismat as having \"courage beyond that of most women\" in this matter. Nur ad-Din's general Saladin had meanwhile gained control over Egypt, and claimed Damascus as his successor; he legitimized this claim by marrying Ismat at-Din in 1176. She was apparently not his only wife. However, by the time she died in 1186, Saladin was writing letters to her every day; as he was himself recovering from a lengthy illness at the time, news of her death was kept from him for three months.She had no children with either Nur ad-Din or Saladin. In Damascus she was the patron of numerous religious buildings, including a madrasa and a mausoleum for her father. She was buried in the Jamaa' al-Jadid in Damascus.".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun deathDate "1186-01-26".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun deathYear "1186".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageID "16210285".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageLength "4321".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageOutDegree "36".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageRevisionID "623857040".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Aleppo.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Amalric_of_Jerusalem.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Arabic_name.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Arranged_marriage.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Banias.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Burid_dynasty.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Category:1186_deaths.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Category:12th-century_women.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Category:Muslims_of_the_Second_Crusade.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Damascus.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Category:Women_in_medieval_warfare.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Category:Year_of_birth_unknown.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Crusades.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Damascus.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Egypt.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Emir.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Honorific.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Jamaa_al-Jadid.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Khatun.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Kingdom_of_Jerusalem.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink List_of_rulers_of_Damascus.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Madrasa.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Mosul.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Muin_ad-Din_Unur.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Nur_ad-Din,_atabeg_of_Aleppo.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Polygyny_in_Islam.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Saladin.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Second_Crusade.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Shajar_al-Durr.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Siege_of_Damascus_(1148).
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink William_of_Tyre.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Women_in_Arab_societies.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Women_in_Islam.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLink Zengid_dynasty.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ismat ad-Din Khatun".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageWikiLinkText "Widow".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun dateOfDeath "1186-01-26".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun name "Ismat Ad-Din Khatun".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun shortDescription "wife of Saladin".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-ar.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Persondata.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun description "wife of Saladin".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun description "wife of Saladin".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun subject Category:1186_deaths.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun subject Category:12th-century_women.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun subject Category:Muslims_of_the_Second_Crusade.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun subject Category:People_from_Damascus.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun subject Category:Women_in_medieval_warfare.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun subject Category:Year_of_birth_unknown.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun type Agent.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun type Person.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun type Person.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun type Agent.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun type NaturalPerson.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun type Thing.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun type Q215627.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun type Q5.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun type Person.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun comment "Ismat ad-Din was also the name of the Mamluk sultana more commonly known as Shajar al-Durr.ʿIṣmat ad-Dīn Khātūn (Arabic: عصمة الدين خاتون; died January 26, 1186), also known as Asimat, was the daughter of Mu'in ad-Din Unur, regent of Damascus, and wife of two of the greatest Muslim generals of the 12th century, Nur ad-Din Zangi and Saladin.Ismat ad-Din is a laqab (the descriptive part of an Arabic name) meaning \"purity of the faith\"; Khatun is an honorific meaning \"lady\" or \"noblewoman\".".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun label "Ismat ad-Din Khatun".
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun sameAs Q6084969.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun sameAs عصمة_الدين_خاتون.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun sameAs イスマトゥッディーン・アーミナ.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun sameAs m.03wd09z.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun sameAs Q6084969.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun wasDerivedFrom Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun?oldid=623857040.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun isPrimaryTopicOf Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun.
- Ismat_ad-Din_Khatun name "Ismat Ad-Din Khatun".