The Mamluk empire was at the apex of its power in the 14th century under Sultan al-Nasir Muhammad ibn Qalawun. He ruled for 41 years, a record never surpassed by any Mamluk sovereign. Cairo was ...
This is the metadata section. Skip to content viewer section. Abū al-Fidā: Géographie d’Aboulféda/Taqwīm al-buldān (J.T. Reinaud ed. and trans.) (2 vols). Paris 1848. Adam J.-P. 1994. Roman Building: ...
This sub-project explores the role of translation in the formation and early stages of the Ottoman-Turkic literary corpus, by juxtaposing this with its role in the development of the Mamluk-Turkic ...
The stone exhibits various kinds of markings: drawings of coats of arms, pilgrim names and ad hoc inscriptions, clearly carved by Christian pilgrims to the Holy Land during the Mamluk period ... The ...
but also within the Ottoman Empire, the Levant, Mesopotamia and as far away as India. Mahmoud said: "The present-day Mamluk Academy is headquartered in Ankara, Turkey, with multiple other clubs ...
This tapestry, woven in the mid-16th century, and based on a painting in the Louvre, tells a fascinating story of diplomacy ...
The tapestry, The Reception of an Embassy, was taken down from the castle’s ballroom by the Powis Castle collections team in preparation for its long journey to France for the Mamluks, 1250-1517 ...
Tumanbay, heart of a vast empire, is threatened by a rebellion and a mysterious force devouring the empire from within. Epic saga inspired by the Mamluk slave dynasty of Egypt.