- Artuqid dynasty
The Artuqid dynasty (Artuklu in Turkish, sometimes also spelled as Artukid, Ortoqid or Ortokid; Turkish
plural : " Artukoğulları") was an Oghuz Turkish dynasty that ruled in Eastern Anatolia and NorthernIraq in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. Two main branches of the dynasty ruled fromHasankeyf ("Hısn-ı Keyf, Hısnkeyfa") between1102 –1231 andMardin between1106 –1186 (and until1409 as vassals). There was also a third branch that acquiredHarput in1112 and was independent between1185 –1233 .The dynasty was founded by Artuq, son of Eksük, a general originally under
Malik Shah I and then under the Seljuk emir ofDamascus ,Tutush I . Tutush appointed Artuq governor ofJerusalem in1086 . Artuq died in 1091, and his sonsSokman andIlghazi were expelled from Jerusalem by theFatimid vizieral-Afdal Shahanshah in1098 ; the Fatimids lost the city to thecrusade rs the following year.Sokman and Ilghazi set themselves up in
Diyarbakır ,Mardin , andHasankeyf in the Jezirah, where they came into conflict with the sultanate ofGreat Seljuk . Sokman,bey of Mardin, defeated the crusaders at theBattle of Harran in1104 . Ilghazi succeeded Sokman in Mardin and imposed his control overAleppo at the request of the "qadi "Ibn al-Khashshab in1118 . In1119 Ilgazi defeated the crusaderPrincipality of Antioch at theBattle of Ager Sanguinis .In
1121 a Seljuk-Artuqid alliance, commanded byMehmed I of Great Seljuk and Ilghazi, was defeated by Georgia at theBattle of Didgori . Ilghazi died in1122 , and although his nephew Balak nominally controlled Aleppo, the city was really controlled by Ibn al-Khashshab. Al-Kashshab wasassassin ated in1125 , and Aleppo fell under the control ofZengi ofMosul . After the death of Balak, the Artuqids were split between Diyarbakır, Hasankeyf and Mardin. Sokman's son Davud,bey of Hasankeyf, died in1144 , and was succeeded by his son Kara Aslan. Kara Aslan allied withJoscelin II of Edessa against the Zengids, and while Joscelin was away in 1144, Zengi recaptured Edessa, the first of theCrusader state s to fall (seeSiege of Edessa ). Hasankeyf became a vassal of Zengi as well.Kara Aslan's son Nur ad-Din Muhammad allied with the
Ayyubid sultanSaladin against the Sultan of RumKilij Arslan II , whose daughter had married Nur ad-Din Muhammad. In a peace settlement with Kilij Arslan, Saladin gained control of Artuqid territory, although the Artuqids were still technically vassals ofMosul , which Saladin did not yet control. With Artuqid support Saladin eventually took control of Mosul as well.The Artuklu dynasty still nominally controlled the upper Mesopotamia but their power declined under Ayyubid rule.
Art
Despite their constant preoccupation with war, members of the Artuklu dynasty left brilliant architectural monuments.
They made the most significant additions to
Diyarbakır City Walls . Urfa Gate was rebuilt by Muhammad, son of Kara Arslan. In the same area of the western wall, south of Urfa Gate, two imposing towers, Ulu Beden and Yedi Kardeş were commissioned in 1208 by the Artuklu ruler Salih Mahmud who designed the Yedi Kardeş tower himself and apposed the Artukid double-headed eagle on its walls.A large
caravanserai in Mardin as well as thecivil engineering feat ofMalabadi Bridge are still in regular use in our day. The partially standingHasankeyf Bridge was built in 1116 by Kara Arslan.The Great Mosques of
Mardin andSilvan were possibly but in any case considerably developed over the 12th century by several Artuklu rulers on the basis of existing Seljuk edifices. The congregational mosque of Dunaysir (nowKızıltepe ) was commissioned by Artuklu Bey Yülük Arslan (1184–1203) and completed after his death in 1204 by his brother Artuk Arslan (1203–1239).ee also
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Malabadi Bridge
*Anatolian Turkish Beyliks
*Al-Jazari External links
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* http://www.selcuklular.com/?ources
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=mKpz_2CkoWEC&pg=PR10&lpg=PP1&vq=saltuqids&dq=new+islamic+dynasties&ie=ISO-8859-1&output=html&sig=LkaIO80Cs6of_SpkqIX6rCWQE0U (limited preview)] cite book | title = The New Islamic Dynasties: A Chronological and Genealogical Manual ISBN 0748621377|author=Clifford Edmund Bosworth |publisher=Edinburgh University Press | year= 2004
*Carole Hillenbrand , "A Muslim Principality in Crusader Times: The Early Artuqid State". Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut, 1990.
* Carole Hillenbrand, "The Crusades: Islamic Perspectives". Routledge, 2000.
* [http://www.ottomanstore.com/switch.php?file=ProductInfo&cat_id=82&product_id=1146 (Book cover)] cite book | title = Anadolu'da ilk Türk mimarisi: Başlangıcı ve gelişmesi ("Early Turkish architecture in Anatolia: Beginnings and development) ISBN 975-16-0264-5|author= Oktay Aslanapa|publisher=AKM Publications,Ankara | year= 1991|language=Turkish
* P.M. Holt, "The Age of the Crusades: The Near East from the Eleventh Century to 1517". Longman, 1989.
*Steven Runciman , "A History of the Crusades, vol. II".Cambridge University Press , 1952.
* Kenneth Setton, ed., "A History of the Crusades." Madison: 1969–1989 ( [http://libtext.library.wisc.edu/HistCrusades/ available online] ).
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