112:
Although Dhuka had the garrison of
Alexandria reinforced following the sack of Barqa, the arrival of the Fatimid expeditionary force in July 919 caught him by surprise. The city's governor, Dhuka's son Muzaffar, fled, along with his aides and many of the populace, leaving the city to be sacked.
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after an 18-month siege in 917. The
Fatimids evidently had sympathizers in Egypt, as the Egyptians since the early 9th century had come to resent rule from Baghdad; Dhuka was forced to execute several people for corresponding with the Fatimid ruler
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Dhuka died on 1st August, and was succeeded by his predecessor Takin, who arrived to take up his office in
January. Once more, the intervention of Mu'nis in the next year saved Fustat and threw the Fatimids out of the country.
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to fight, exacerbated by the habitual delays in their pay, forcing him to rely on volunteers at first. He nevertheless moved quickly to secure
92:. The first Fatimid attempt to capture Egypt ended in failure thanks to Mu'nis' intervention, but soon the Fatimids began to make plans for a
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The Rise of the
Fatimids: The World of the Mediterranean and the Middle East in the Fourth Century of the Hijra, Tenth Century CE
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from Fustat, by constructing a fort there. Soon after, however, the new fiscal administrator for Egypt,
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Dhuka's efforts to repel the new invasion were hampered by the reluctance of the provincial garrison at
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He was installed as governor of Egypt in 915 by the
Abbasid commander-in-chief
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73:, as part of his effort to stabilize the situation in the country and expel a
247:. Handbook of Oriental Studies. Translated by Michael Bonner. Leiden: BRILL.
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at the time, and arrived in Egypt in late August, succeeding
226:. The Medieval Mediterranean. Vol. 30. Leiden: BRILL.
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244:The Empire of the Mahdi: The Rise of the Fatimids
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341:10th-century Abbasid governors of Egypt
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331:Converts to Islam from Christianity
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54:'; died 11 August 919) was a
96:, starting with the capture of
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316:10th-century Byzantine people
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272:
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220:Brett, Michael (2001).
127:al-Husayn al-Madhara'i
107:al-Qa'im bi-Amr Allah
241:Halm, Heinz (1996).
321:Byzantine defectors
178:, pp. 146–147.
166:, pp. 205–206.
306:9th-century births
207:, pp. 208ff..
71:Mu'nis al-Muzaffar
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285:Succeeded by
278:Governor of Egypt
60:Abbasid Caliphate
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288:Takin al-Khazari
268:Takin al-Khazari
265:Preceded by
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90:Takin al-Khazari
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103:al-Mahdi Billah
84:. Dhuka was in
80:that had taken
62:as governor of
58:who served the
56:Byzantine Greek
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94:second assault
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36:Dhūka al-Rūmī
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17:Dhuka al-Rumi
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66:in 915–919.
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25:ذوكه الرومي
311:919 deaths
300:Categories
254:9004100563
233:9004117415
176:Brett 2001
137:References
82:Alexandria
205:Halm 1996
193:Halm 1996
164:Halm 1996
152:Halm 1996
30:romanized
282:915–919
78:invasion
275:Abbasid
214:Sources
75:Fatimid
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32::
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115:Fustat
86:Aleppo
48:Doukas
21:Arabic
98:Barqa
64:Egypt
52:Roman
46:'
249:ISBN
228:ISBN
123:Nile
119:Giza
50:the
42:lit.
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183:^
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39:,
27:,
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257:.
236:.
19:(
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