The Ma'n dynasty (Arabic: ٱلْأُسْرَةُ ٱلْمَعْنِيَّةُ, romanized: Banū Maʿn, alternatively spelled Ma'an), also known as the Ma'nids; (Arabic: ٱلْمَعْنِيُّونَ)...
54 KB (6,671 words) - 15:49, 5 June 2024
the last member of the Ma'n dynasty, after which paramount leadership passed to his marital relatives from the Shihab dynasty. Unlike his granduncle Fakhr...
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Christianity and Druze (section Ma'n dynasty)
the Ma'n dynasty, a great Druze feudal family, and the Shihabs, a mixed Sunni Muslim-Druze family that had converted to Christianity. Ma'n dynasty were...
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chieftainship of the Druze districts of Mount Lebanon in opposition to the Ma'n and Shihab families in the late 17th and early 18th centuries during Ottoman...
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Ottoman rule, they maintained an alliance and marital ties with the Ma'n dynasty, the Chouf-based, paramount Druze emirs and tax farmers of Mount Lebanon...
35 KB (4,571 words) - 11:53, 13 June 2024
Fakhr al-Din II (redirect from Fakhr al-Din ibn Qurqumaz Ma'n)
al-Dīn al-Thānī), was the paramount Druze emir of Mount Lebanon from the Ma'n dynasty, an Ottoman governor of Sidon-Beirut and Safed, and the strongman over...
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Mulhim ibn Yunus Ma'n was the paramount Druze emir of Mount Lebanon and head of the Ma'n dynasty after succeeding his uncle Fakhr al-Din II in 1633. The...
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History of the Chouf region (section Ma'n dynasty)
chiefs Qurqumaz, Zayn al-Din and Alam al-Din Sulayman from the Chouf-based Ma'n family and Sharaf al-Din Yahya of the Gharb-based Tanukh-Buhtur family. The...
133 KB (17,521 words) - 12:27, 24 May 2024
Druze (section Ma'an dynasty)
of his life. Fakhr ad Din II was succeeded in 1635 by his nephew Mulhim Ma'n, who ruled through his death in 1658. (Fakhr ad Din's only surviving son...
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Emirate of Mount Lebanon (section Maanid dynasty)
soon afterwards as a local force, and was the first member of the Ma'an dynasty to serve the Ottomans. The Ottomans divided the territories they conquered...
29 KB (3,390 words) - 05:39, 8 June 2024