After the death of Malik al-Nāsir Muhammad, there was a period known as the son of Nāsir's son in the Mamluk Turkish State. During this period, power struggles were born to bring about important consequences between the sultan's sons and the bureaucrats. After the death of the Sultan, his two sons, Abū Bakr and Alāaddin Kujuk, were put down by the active group known as Nasīriyah amīrs. These amīrs were made on the throne by preferring Şahab al-din Ahmad, who was the sultan's eldest son and resident in Karak, to Alāaddin Kujuk. Şahab aldin Ahmad wanted to take a radical decision to move the state center from Cairo to Karak. After a while Cairo settled in Karak with his abandonment, he was dismissed from the army by the elders of amīrs and was replaced by his brother, al-Malik alSālih Ismāʿil. Ismāʿil spent his brother Ahmad, who was in rebellion in Karak, a large part of his reign. The state has suffered a serious economic loss in the wake of the siege of Karak, which lasted for about three years. There is no study directly addressing this period of the Mamluk Turkish State based on the wooden conflict between the two brothers. In our papers, Şahab al-din Ahmad and al-Malik al-Sālih Ismāʿil periods Mamluk Turkish history is covered in detail
Alan : Sosyal, Beşeri ve İdari Bilimler
Dergi Türü : Ulusal
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