Mustanṣir billāh, Fatimid Caliph, 1029-1094

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Mustanṣir billāh, Fatimid Caliph, 1029-1094
Name (Arabic)
المستنصر بالله، خليفة فاطمي، 1029-1094
Other forms of name
al-Mustanṣir billāh, Fatimid Caliph, 1029-1094
Mustanṣir, Fatimid Caliph, 1029-1094
المستنصر بالله، الخليفة الفاطمي الثامن، 1029-1094
مستنصر بالله، خليفة فاطمي، 1029-1094
المستنصر بالله، الخليفة الفاطمي الثامن، حكم 1036-1094
Date of birth
1029
Date of death
1094
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 61422965
Wikidata: Q284619
Library of congress: nr 93049529
Sources of Information
  • The Author's السجلات المستنصرية, [١٩٨٠؟].
  • His al-Sijillāt al-Mustanṣirīyah, 1954:t.p. (al-Imām al-Mustanṣir billāh Amīr al-Muʼminīn)
  • Encycl. of Islam(al-Mustanṣir bi ʼllāh; Abū Tamim Maʻadd b. ʻAlī al-Ẓāhir, 8th Fāṭimid Caliph, b. July 2, 1029, d. Jan. 10, 1094)
  • Enc. Brit., 15th ed.(Mustanṣir, al-; b. 1029, d. 1094, eighth Fāṭimid caliph)
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Wikipedia description:

Abū Tamīm Maʿad al-Mustanṣir biʾllāh (Arabic: أبو تميم معد المستنصر بالله‎; 2 July 1029 – 29 December 1094) was the eighth Fatimid Caliph from 1036 until 1094. He was one of the longest reigning Muslim rulers. His reign was the twilight of the Fatimid state. The start of his reign saw the continuation of competent administrators running the Fatimid state (Anushtakin, al-Jarjara'i, and later al-Yazuri), overseeing the state's prosperity in the first two decades of al-Mustansir's reign. However, the break out of court infighting between the Turkish and Berber/Sudanese court factions following al-Yazuri's assassination, coinciding with natural disasters in Egypt and the gradual loss of administrative control over Fatimid possessions outside of Egypt, almost resulted in the total collapse of the Fatimid state in the 1060s, before the appointment of the Armenian general Badr al-Jamali, who assumed power as vizier in 1073, and became the de facto dictator of the country under the nominal rule of al-Mustansir. The caliph al-Mustanṣir bi-llāh was the last Imam before a disastrous split divided the Isma'ili movement in two, due to the struggle in the succession between al-Mustansir's older son, Nizar, and the younger al-Mustaʽli, who was raised to the throne by Badr's son and successor, al-Afdal Shahanshah. The followers of Nizar, who predominated in Iran and Syria, became the Nizari branch of Isma'ilism, while those of al-Musta'li became the Musta'li branch.

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