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to be raise and educated in his court. After
Yazdegerd's death, Persian nobles tried to reclaim Bahram from Mundhir, so Mundhir sent his son Nu'man with a brigade then he personally escorted Bahram another brigade of 20,000 soldiers to Ctesiphon where the nobles, after some negotiations, acknowledged
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were upset at the persecution of
Christians in the Persian lands where Bahram killed a number of them and Mundhir in turn was for the persecution and converted back to his paganism, the Byzantines besieged
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29:
517:
242:
Rothstein, S. 69, Socrates, VII, 18, Bar
Hebraeus, Chron. Syriac, 75, Caussin, Essai, II 63, Noldede, Sas, 86, Paulys-Wissowa, Erster Galbband, S. 1281
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522:
211:, many of his forces drowned. Syriac sources give a figure of those who drowned at 70,000 while Socrates give a higher figure of 100,000. The
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207:, where he was routed by Vitianus. Another unfortunate campaign was carried out by Mundhir a year later. While his troops were crossing the
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so Bahram along with
Mundhir went to lift the siege. Later Mundhir marched towards Byzantine lands and ravaged the lands as far as
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The
History of al-Ṭabarī, Volume V: The Sāsānids, the Byzantines, the Lakhmids, and Yemen
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came to end with a peace treaty in 422. In 457 Lakhmid troops attacked "Beth Hur" near
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in the Roman domain, taking the inhabitants into captivity.
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king (418-461). His mother's name was Hind bint Zayd-
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503:5th-century monarchs in the Middle East
260:Caussin de Perceval, op. cit., II, P.63
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213:war between Persia and the Byzantines
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518:Vassal rulers of the Sasanian Empire
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14:
222:Mundhir was succeeded by his son
194:Bahram as their ruler. Later the
33:Portrayal of al-Mundhir in the
523:Arabs from the Sasanian Empire
1:
99:
86:
474:al-Nu'man III ibn al-Mundhir
466:al-Mundhir IV ibn al-Mundhir
436:al-Mundhir III ibn al-Nu'man
412:al-Mundhir II ibn al-Mundhir
388:al-Nu'man I ibn Imru al-Qays
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396:al-Mundhir I ibn al-Nu'man
22:Al-Mundhir I ibn al-Nu'man
420:al-Nu'man II ibn al-Aswad
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251:Socrates, VII, Chapter 18
35:Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp
26:
152:Al-Mundhir ibn al-Nuʿmān
513:5th-century Arab people
431:(non-dynastic, 503–505)
404:al-Aswad ibn al-Mundhir
380:Imru al-Qays II ibn Amr
375:(non-dynastic, 363–368)
364:Amr II ibn Imru al-Qays
224:al-Aswad ibn al-Mundhir
115:al-Aswad ibn al-Mundhir
73:Al-Aswad ibn al-Mundhir
444:Amr III ibn al-Mundhir
356:Imru al-Qays I ibn Amr
428:Abu Ya'fur ibn Alqama
174:, and his father was
452:Qabus ibn al-Mundhir
16:King of the Lakhmids
351:(late 3rd century)
170:ibn Zayd-Allah al-
162:) was the seventh
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290:978-0-7914-4355-2
160:المنذر بن النعمان
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328:Rulers of the
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43:King of the
439:(503/5–554)
187:Yazdegerd I
176:al-Nu'man I
63:Al-Nu'man I
59:Predecessor
508:461 deaths
492:Categories
230:References
196:Byzantines
191:Bahram Gur
136:al-Numan I
103: 462
90: 418
477:(580–602)
469:(575–580)
455:(569–574)
447:(554–569)
423:(497–503)
415:(490–497)
407:(462–490)
399:(418–462)
391:(390–418)
383:(368–390)
367:(328–363)
359:(295–328)
209:Euphrates
182:Biography
69:Successor
330:Lakhmids
172:Ghassani
126:Lakhmids
105:(age 44)
45:Lakhmids
459:Suhrab
334:al-Hira
268:Sources
205:Antioch
201:Nisibis
164:Lakhmid
54:418–461
287:
217:Harran
156:Arabic
142:Mother
132:Father
168:Manāt
121:House
111:Issue
51:Reign
285:ISBN
96:Died
83:Born
332:of
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100:c.
87:c.
321:e
314:t
307:v
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154:(
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