Al-Mansur Najm al-Din Ghazi II

Emir of Mardin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Al-Mansur Najm al-Din Ghazi II (r.1294-1312) was a son of the Artuqid ruler of Mardin Al-Muzaffar Fakhr al-Din Kara Arslan (r. 1260–1292). He ruled Mardin after his brother Al-Sa'id Shams al-Din Dāwūd I (r.1292–1294), from 1294 to 1312.[2]

Reign1294-1312
PredecessorAl-Sa'id Shams al-Din Dāwūd I
Successor'Ali Alpï II
Quick facts Emir of Mardin, Reign ...
Al-Mansur Najm al-Din Ghazi II
Coinage of Najm al-Din Ghazi II, Mardin. Round face within circle.[1]
Emir of Mardin
Reign1294-1312
PredecessorAl-Sa'id Shams al-Din Dāwūd I
Successor'Ali Alpï II
Issue'Ali Alpï II
As-Salih Shams al-Din Mahmūd
HouseArtuqids
FatherAl-Muzaffar Fakhr al-Din Kara Arslan
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Al-Mansur Najm al-Din Ghazi II remained under Mongol Il-khanid rule following the Mongol siege of Mardin in 1260, when the Mardin line of Artuqid rulers submitted to Hulegu.[2][2][3]

Coins minted in Mardin in the Middle Ages during the city's rule by the Artuqid dynasty and the Mongol Empire are noted for prominently incorporating solar iconography, both in the form of the Lion and Sun emblem but also in the form of just the sun alone.[4]

He had two sons who succeeded him in turn:[2]

Sources

  • Bosworth, Clifford Edmund (2004). The New Islamic Dynasties: A Chronological and Genealogical Manual. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0-7486-2137-7.

References

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