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Malik Shah I

A Wisdom Archive on Malik Shah I

Malik Shah I

A selection of articles related to Malik Shah I

We recommend this article: Malik Shah I - 1, and also this: Malik Shah I - 2.
Malik Shah I

ARTICLES RELATED TO Malik Shah I

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Goldie - Music career

In 1992 he collaborated with Icelanders Thorhallur Skulason and Sigurbjorn Thorgrimsson on his first track as Ajax Project while he was doing some design and A&R work for 4 Hero's Reinforced label. His releases Killa Muffin b/w Krisp Buscuit and the Dark Rider EP (featuring the classic Menace) were put out under an early moniker Rufige Kru on Reinforced. His track Terminator recorded under the name Metalheads in 1992 was a huge hit. In 1993 he released another c ...

See also:

Goldie, Goldie - Graffiti, Goldie - Music career, Goldie - Selected Album discography, Goldie - Selected Mix discography, Goldie - Acting career, Goldie - Marriage and Personal life

Read more here: » Goldie: Encyclopedia II - Goldie - Music career

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Wu-Tang Clan - Recent history

In 2000, the group reconvened to make a new album, minus Ol' Dirty Bastard who was incarcerated in California for violating the terms of his probation. Almost finished with his rehab, Ol' Dirty Bastard escaped suddenly and spent one month on the run as a fugitive before showing up onstage at the record release party for The W, the group's new album. Ol' Dirty Bastard managed to escape the club, but was captured by Philadelphia police and sent to New York to face charges of cocaine possession. In April 2001, he was sentenced to two to ...

See also:

Wu-Tang Clan, Wu-Tang Clan - Foundation, Wu-Tang Clan - Solo Careers, Wu-Tang Clan - Expansion, Wu-Tang Clan - Recent history, Wu-Tang Clan - TV & Film Appearances, Wu-Tang Clan - Discography, Wu-Tang Clan - Albums, Wu-Tang Clan - Singles, Wu-Tang Clan - Appear On

Read more here: » Wu-Tang Clan: Encyclopedia II - Wu-Tang Clan - Recent history

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia - Battle of Fort Sumter

The Battle of Fort Sumter (April 12–13, 1861), a relatively minor military engagement at Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, began the American Civil War. Battle of Fort Sumter - Prelude. The election of Abraham Lincoln (and other reasons described in the article Causes of the American Civil War) caused seven Southern states, led by South Carolina, to secede and form the Confederate States of America early in 1861. Confederate forces seized control of Federal forts and customs houses ...

Including:

Read more here: » Battle of Fort Sumter: Encyclopedia - Battle of Fort Sumter

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Wu-Tang Clan - Discography

Wu-Tang Clan - Albums. 1993 Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) 1997 Wu-Tang Forever 2000 The W 2001 Iron Flag 2004 Disciples of the 36 Chambers: Chapter 1 (live album) 2005 Legend of the Wu-Tang Clan (compilation) 2005 Full Cycle Model 10304 2005 Dreddy Kruger Presents... Think Differently Music ...

See also:

Wu-Tang Clan, Wu-Tang Clan - Foundation, Wu-Tang Clan - Solo Careers, Wu-Tang Clan - Expansion, Wu-Tang Clan - Recent history, Wu-Tang Clan - TV & Film Appearances, Wu-Tang Clan - Discography, Wu-Tang Clan - Albums, Wu-Tang Clan - Singles, Wu-Tang Clan - Appear On

Read more here: » Wu-Tang Clan: Encyclopedia II - Wu-Tang Clan - Discography

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Henry Lee Lucas - Matricide

In late 1959, Lucas moved to Tecumseh, Michigan to live with his half-sister, Opal. Lucas was engaged to marry when his mother visited Michigan for Christmas. She disapproved of her son's fiancée and insisted he move back to Virginia. He refused, and they argued repeatedly about his upcoming nuptials. On January 11, 1960, Lucas killed his mother, stabbing her with a knife. He claimed to have returned home from a night of drinking and gone to bed, only to be later woken by his mother, who beat him with a broom. Lucas fled in a stolen car, returned to Virginia, then says he decided to drive back to Michigan, but was arrested ...

See also:

Henry Lee Lucas, Henry Lee Lucas - Early life, Henry Lee Lucas - Matricide, Henry Lee Lucas - 1983 arrest and multiple confessions, Henry Lee Lucas - The Lucas Report and controversy, Henry Lee Lucas - Dissenting opinions, Henry Lee Lucas - Orange Socks, Henry Lee Lucas - In fiction

Read more here: » Henry Lee Lucas: Encyclopedia II - Henry Lee Lucas - Matricide

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Frank Lloyd Wright - Works

Frank Lloyd Wright - 1880's. Hillside Home School I, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1887 Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio, Oak Park, Illinois, 1889 Frank Lloyd Wright - 1890's. Louis Sullivan Bungalow, Ocean Springs, Mississippi, 1890 Destroyed by Hurricane Katrina James Charnley Bungalow, Ocean Springs, Mississippi, 1890 Gutted by Hurricane Katrina, with much of the structure moved 3 to 4 feet from its foundation. Restoration would be in the mi ...

See also:

Frank Lloyd Wright, Frank Lloyd Wright - Early years, Frank Lloyd Wright - Europe and personal troubles, Frank Lloyd Wright - Taliesin and beyond, Frank Lloyd Wright - More personal turmoil, Frank Lloyd Wright - Enduring legacy, Frank Lloyd Wright - Quotations, Frank Lloyd Wright - Works, Frank Lloyd Wright - 1880's, Frank Lloyd Wright - 1890's, Frank Lloyd Wright - 1900's, Frank Lloyd Wright - 1910's, Frank Lloyd Wright - 1920's, Frank Lloyd Wright - 1930's, Frank Lloyd Wright - 1940's, Frank Lloyd Wright - 1950's, Frank Lloyd Wright - Other, Frank Lloyd Wright - Unbuilt works

Read more here: » Frank Lloyd Wright: Encyclopedia II - Frank Lloyd Wright - Works

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Red Scare - The Red Summer

A series of bombings in June of 1919 sparked the FBI to more aggressive actions. The mayor of Seattle received a homemade bomb in the mail on April 28, which was defused. Senator Thomas W. Hardwick received a bomb the next day, which blew off the hands of his servant who had discovered it, severely burning him and his wife. The following morning, a New York City postal worker discovered sixteen similar packages addressed to well-known people of the time, including oil tycoon John D. Rockefeller. There were 38 bombs in all, sent to prominent ...

See also:

Red Scare, Red Scare - Origins, Red Scare - The Red Summer, Red Scare - Reactions, Red Scare - The Second Red Scare, Red Scare - Causes, Red Scare - Reactions, Red Scare - Contemporary accounts 1919 - 1924, Red Scare - Contemporary accounts 1945 - 1955, Red Scare - Secondary resources

Read more here: » Red Scare: Encyclopedia II - Red Scare - The Red Summer

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Ulysses S. Grant - Legacy

Ulysses S. Grant - Anti-Semitism. Grant's legacy has been marred by the possibility of anti-Semitism. The most frequently cited example is the infamous General Order No. 11, issued by Grant's headquarters in Oxford, Mississippi, on December 17, 1862, during the early Vicksburg Campaign. The order stated in part: The Jews, as a class, violating every regulation of trade established by the Treasury Department, and also Department orders, are hereby expelled from the Department [comprising areas of Tennes ...

See also:

Ulysses S. Grant, Ulysses S. Grant - Birth and early years, Ulysses S. Grant - Military career, Ulysses S. Grant - Mexican War, Ulysses S. Grant - Between the Wars, Ulysses S. Grant - Western Theater of the Civil War, Ulysses S. Grant - General-in-Chief and strategy for victory, Ulysses S. Grant - Overland Campaign Petersburg and Appomattox, Ulysses S. Grant - Presidency, Ulysses S. Grant - Cabinet, Ulysses S. Grant - Supreme Court appointments, Ulysses S. Grant - States admitted to the Union, Ulysses S. Grant - Later life, Ulysses S. Grant - Timeline, Ulysses S. Grant - Legacy, Ulysses S. Grant - Anti-Semitism, Ulysses S. Grant - In memoriam, Ulysses S. Grant - Trivia, Ulysses S. Grant - Notes

Read more here: » Ulysses S. Grant: Encyclopedia II - Ulysses S. Grant - Legacy

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Harold Bloom - Bibliography

Harold Bloom - Miscellaneous Books. (Editor) English Romantic Poetry, An Anthology, Doubleday, 1961, two-volume revised edition, Anchor, 1963. (Editor, with John Hollander) The Wind and the Rain, Doubleday, 1961. The Literary Criticism of John Ruskin, Edited and with Introduction by Harold Bloom, Anchor, 1965. (Editor, with Frederick W. Hilles) From Sensibility to Romanticism: Essays Presented to Frederick A. Pottle, Oxford University Press, 1965. ...

See also:

Harold Bloom, Harold Bloom - Life, Harold Bloom - Bloom's Influence, Harold Bloom - Bibliography, Harold Bloom - Miscellaneous Books, Harold Bloom - Articles, Harold Bloom - Books About Harold Bloom, Harold Bloom - Awards

Read more here: » Harold Bloom: Encyclopedia II - Harold Bloom - Bibliography

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - List of fictional U.S. Presidents - N

President Gary Nance President in: Dave Succeeds to presidency upon death of President William Mitchell. Nance has honorable ethics and morals, is cleared in a scandal involving bank fraud. Most likely Republican Played by: Ben Kingsley President Jack Neil President in: Murder at 1600 Family is framed for murder in retaliation for making military decisions his national security advisor doesn't like. The president has a sexual reputatio ...

See also:

List of fictional U.S. Presidents, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - A, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - B, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - C, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - D, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - E, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - F, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - G, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - H, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - J, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - K, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - L, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - M, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - N, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - O, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - P, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - R, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - S, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - T, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - V, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - W, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - Y, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - Unnamed presidents, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - Notes, List of fictional U.S. Presidents - Real people

Read more here: » List of fictional U.S. Presidents: Encyclopedia II - List of fictional U.S. Presidents - N

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia - Alp Arslan

Muhammed ben Da'ud (1029–December 15, 1072) was the second sultan of the dynasty of Seljuk Turks, in Persia, and great-grandson of Seljuk, the founder of the dynasty. He assumed the name of Muhammed when he embraced Islam, and on account of his military prowess and personal valor and fighting skills he obtained the surname Alp Arslan, which signifies "a valiant lion." He succeeded his father Da'ud as ruler of Khorasan in 1059, and his uncle Toğrül as sultan of Iran and Baghdad in 1063, and thus became sole monarch of ...

Including:

Read more here: » Alp Arslan: Encyclopedia - Alp Arslan

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia - Vizier

A Vizier (وزير, sometimes also spelled Vizir, Wasir, Wazir, Wesir, Wezir - grammatical vowel changes are common in many oriental languages) is an oriental, originally Persian, term for a high-ranking political (and sometimes religious) advisor or Minister, often to a Muslim monarch such as a Caliph, Amir, Malik (king) or Sultan. Also used anachronistically or in a modern Islamic republic's cabinet. Vizier - Historical titles. In pre-Islamic Persia the vichir (Middle-Persian for Vizier), wa ...

Including:

Read more here: » Vizier: Encyclopedia - Vizier

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia - 1086

1086 - Events. Domesday Book is completed in England Emperor Shirakawa starts his cloistered rule Imam Ali Mosque is rebuilt by the Seljuk Malik Shah I after being destroyed by fire. Alfonso VI of Léon and Castille is defeated by the Almoravids on the battle of az-Zallaqah, called into Spain by Abbad III of Sevilla. 1086 - Deaths. May 21 - Wang Anshi, Chinese statesman (b. 1021) May 25 - Pope Gregory VII July 17 - ...

Including:

Read more here: » 1086: Encyclopedia - 1086

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Isfahan city - History

Isfahan city - Prehistory. History of Isfahan can be traced back to the Palaeolithic period. In recent Archaeological discoveries, archaeologist have found artifacts, dated back to Palaeolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic, bronze and Iron ages. Isfahan city - From Elamites to Arab Invasion. Ancient Isfahan was part of the Elamite empire. Under the name of Aspandana it became one of the principal towns of the Median dynasty, when Iranian Medes settled there. Subsequently the province ...

See also:

Isfahan city, Isfahan city - Geography, Isfahan city - History, Isfahan city - Prehistory, Isfahan city - From Elamites to Arab Invasion, Isfahan city - Arab Invasion, Isfahan city - Culture, Isfahan city - Architecture of Isfahan, Isfahan city - Rugs of Isfahan, Isfahan city - Historical sites, Isfahan city - Famous people from Isfahan, Isfahan city - Isfahan Today, Isfahan city - Sports, Isfahan city - Colleges and Universities, Isfahan city - Sister cities, Isfahan city - Further References

Read more here: » Isfahan city: Encyclopedia II - Isfahan city - History

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Kashan - History

Archeological discoveries in the Sialk Hillocks which lie 2.5 Miles (4 km) west of Kashan reveal that this region was one of the primary centers of civilization in pre-historic ages. Hence Kashan dates back to the Elamite period of Iran. The Sialk ziggurat still stands today in the suburbs of Kashan after 7000 years. It was from Kashan where the three wise men of the Bible came from. The artifacts uncovered at Sialk reside in the Louvre in Paris and the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art, ...

See also:

Kashan, Kashan - History, Kashan - Kashan today, Kashan - Colleges and Universities, Kashan - Kashan's architectural heritage, Kashan - Famous Kashanis, Kashan - Sister cities

Read more here: » Kashan: Encyclopedia II - Kashan - History

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Zengi - Zengi against Damascus

Zengi became atabeg of Mosul in 1127, and of Aleppo in 1128, uniting the two cities under his personal rule, and was formally invested as their ruler by the Sultan Mahmud II of Great Seljuk. Zengi had supported the young sultan against his rival, the caliph Al-Mustarshid. In 1130 he allied with Taj al-Mulk Buri of Damascus against the crusaders, but this was only a ruse to extend his power: he had Buri's son taken prisoner and seized Hama from him. He also besieged Hims, the governor of which was accompanying him at the time, but coul ...

See also:

Zengi, Zengi - Zengi against Damascus, Zengi - Conflict with the crusaders and Byzantines, Zengi - Death, Zengi - Legacy, Zengi - Sources

Read more here: » Zengi: Encyclopedia II - Zengi - Zengi against Damascus

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - List of kings of Persia - Rulers after the advent of Islam in Iran

List of kings of Persia - Arab caliphs rule. All Persian provinces fell under The Arabic Caliphate from 661 to 867. Umayyad dynasty, 661–750 Abbasid dynasty, 750–867 divided, 867–1029 List of kings of Persia - Tahirids in Khorasan 821–872. Taher ebne Hosein ebne Mos'ab, Emir 821–822 Talhat ebne Taher, 822–828 Abdollah ebne Taher, 828–844See also:

List of kings of Persia, List of kings of Persia - Early realms in Iran, List of kings of Persia - Elamite Kingdom 3000–660 BC, List of kings of Persia - Jiroft Kingdom c. 2500 BC, List of kings of Persia - Empire of Medians and Persians, List of kings of Persia - Median Dynasty 728–550 BC, List of kings of Persia - Achaemenid dynasty 550–330 BC, List of kings of Persia - Hellenistic rulers, List of kings of Persia - Argead Dynasty 330–310 BC, List of kings of Persia - Seleucid dynasty 305–164 BC, List of kings of Persia - Parthian dynasty Arsacid dynasty 247 BC – AD 224, List of kings of Persia - Sassanid dynasty AD 224–651, List of kings of Persia - Rulers after the advent of Islam in Iran, List of kings of Persia - Arab caliphs rule, List of kings of Persia - Tahirids in Khorasan 821–872, List of kings of Persia - Alavids 864–928, List of kings of Persia - Ziyarids 928–1043, List of kings of Persia - Buyyids 932–1056, List of kings of Persia - Saffarids in Seistan and beyond 861–1002, List of kings of Persia - Samanids Proto-Tajiks 892–998, List of kings of Persia - Ghaznavids 997–1186, List of kings of Persia - Seljuk Turks 1029–1194, List of kings of Persia - Khwarazmids 1096–1230, List of kings of Persia - Ilkhans 1256–1380, List of kings of Persia - Muzaffarid Dynasty 1314–1393, List of kings of Persia - Timurid dynasty 1380–1507, List of kings of Persia - Shahs of modern Iran, List of kings of Persia - Safavid dynasty 1502–1736, List of kings of Persia - Afsharid dynasty 1736–1749, List of kings of Persia - Zand dynasty 1750–1794, List of kings of Persia - Qajar dynasty 1796–1925, List of kings of Persia - Pahlavi dynasty 1925–1979

Read more here: » List of kings of Persia: Encyclopedia II - List of kings of Persia - Rulers after the advent of Islam in Iran

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Alp Arslan - Byzantine struggle

In 1068 Alp Arslan invaded the Byzantine Empire. The emperor Romanus IV Diogenes, assuming the command in person, met the invaders in Cilicia. In three arduous campaigns, the first two of which were conducted by the emperor himself while the third was directed by Manuel Comnenus (great-uncle of Emperor Manuel Comnenus), the Turks were defeated in detail in 1070 driven across the Euphrates. In 1071 Romanus again took the field and advanced with 100,000 men, including a contingent of the Turkish tribe of the Uzes as well as contingents of French ...

See also:

Alp Arslan, Alp Arslan - Byzantine struggle, Alp Arslan - State organization, Alp Arslan - Death, Alp Arslan - Reference

Read more here: » Alp Arslan: Encyclopedia II - Alp Arslan - Byzantine struggle

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Vizier - Historical titles

In pre-Islamic Persia the vichir (Middle-Persian for Vizier), was a minister to the Shah. This word has been borrowed from Persian into Arabic, Turkish and almost all other languages of the Muslim nations. However it has been used in two very different ways : either for a unique position, in western terms the prime minister at the head of the monarch's government (the term Grand Vizier always refers to such post) or as a shared 'cabinet rank', rather like a British Secretary of state (if one of them is the prime minister, he may hold ...

See also:

Vizier, Vizier - Historical titles, Vizier - In Islam's Core Area, Vizier - In Black Africa, Vizier - In the Far East East Indies etc, Vizier - Princely title, Vizier - Modern Islamic republic, Vizier - Anachronistic historical use, Vizier - Art, Vizier - Some famous viziers in history, Vizier - Sources and References

Read more here: » Vizier: Encyclopedia II - Vizier - Historical titles

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - First Crusade - Chronological sequence of the Crusade

First Crusade - The Council of Clermont. Main article: Council of Clermont In March of 1095 Alexius I sent envoys to the Council of Piacenza to ask Urban for aid against the Turks. The emperor's request met with a favourable response from Urban, who hoped to heal the Great Schism of 40 years prior and re-unite the Church under papal supremacy as "chief bishop and prelate over the whole world" (as he referred to himself at ...

See also:

First Crusade, First Crusade - Background, First Crusade - The East in the late eleventh century, First Crusade - Chronological sequence of the Crusade, First Crusade - The Council of Clermont, First Crusade - The People's Crusade, First Crusade - The German Crusade, First Crusade - The Princes' Crusade, First Crusade - The Crusade of 1101 and the establishment of the kingdom, First Crusade - Analysis of the First Crusade, First Crusade - Aftermath, First Crusade - The pilgrims, First Crusade - Popularity of the Crusade, First Crusade - Spiritual versus earthly rewards, First Crusade - Selected sources and further reading, First Crusade - Primary sources, First Crusade - Primary sources online, First Crusade - Secondary sources, First Crusade - Bibliographies

Read more here: » First Crusade: Encyclopedia II - First Crusade - Chronological sequence of the Crusade

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Islamic astronomy - Observatories

The first systematic observations in Islam are reported to have taken place under the patronage of al-Mamun. Here, and in many other private observatories from Damascus to Baghdad, meridian degrees were measured, solar parameters were established, and detailed observations of the Sun, Moon, and planets were undertaken. In the 10th century, the Buwayhid dynasty encouraged the undertaking of extensive works in Astronomy, such as the construction of a large scale instrument with which observations were made in the year 950CE. We know of ...

See also:

Islamic astronomy, Islamic astronomy - Celestial passages in the Quran, Islamic astronomy - Observatories, Islamic astronomy - Instruments, Islamic astronomy - Celestial globes, Islamic astronomy - Astrolabes, Islamic astronomy - Sundials, Islamic astronomy - Quadrants, Islamic astronomy - Equatoria, Islamic astronomy - Muslim astronomers, Islamic astronomy - Famous muslim astronomy books

Read more here: » Islamic astronomy: Encyclopedia II - Islamic astronomy - Observatories

Malik Shah I: Encyclopedia II - Islamic astronomy - Celestial passages in the Quran

Some Muslims quote verses from the Quran that show God encourages people, Muslims and non-Muslims alike, to engage in astronomy, in order to affirm the existence of God. Note: all verses are translated by Sher Ali. Regarding astronomy: Sura 3.190 In the creation of the heavens and the earth and in the alternation of the night and the day there are indeed Signs for men of understanding.; Sura 67.3-4

See also:

Islamic astronomy, Islamic astronomy - Celestial passages in the Quran, Islamic astronomy - Observatories, Islamic astronomy - Instruments, Islamic astronomy - Celestial globes, Islamic astronomy - Astrolabes, Islamic astronomy - Sundials, Islamic astronomy - Quadrants, Islamic astronomy - Equatoria, Islamic astronomy - Muslim astronomers, Islamic astronomy - Famous muslim astronomy books

Read more here: » Islamic astronomy: Encyclopedia II - Islamic astronomy - Celestial passages in the Quran




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