FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   332   333   334   335   336   337   338   339   340   341   342   343   344   345   346   347   348   349   350   351   352   353   354   355   356  
357   358   359   360   361   362   363   364   365   366   367   368   369   370   371   372   373   374   375   376   377   378   379   380   381   >>   >|  
kir, 1148 (1735). Mustafa, 1149 (1736). Sulaiman b. al-'Azim, 1152 (1739). 'Ali Hakim Oghlu, 1153 (1740). Yahya, 1154 (1741). Mahommed Yedkeshi, 1156 (1743). Mahommed Raghib, 1158 (1745). Ahmad Kuruzir, 1161 (1748). Sharif 'Abdallah, 1163 (1750). Mahommed Amin, 1166 (1753). Mustafa, 1166 (1753). 'Ali Hakim Oghlu, 1169 (1756). Mahommed Sa'id, 1171 (1758). Mustafa, 1173 (1759). Ahmad Kamil, 1174 (1761). Bakir, 1175 (1761). Hasan, 1176 (1761). Hamzah, 1179 (1765). Mahommed Raqim, 1181 (1767). Mahommed Urflu, 1182 (1768). Ahmad, 1183 (1770). Qara Khalil, 1184 (1770). Mustafa Nabulsi, 1188 (1774). Ibrahim 'Arabgirli, 1189 (1775). Mahommed 'Izzet, 1190 (1776). Isma'il, 1193 (1779). Mahommed Malik, 1195 (1781). Sharif 'Ali Qassab, 1196 (1782). Mahommed Silahdar, 1198 (1783). Mahommed Yeyen, 1200 (1785). 'Abidin Sharif, 1201 (1787). Isma'il Tunisi, 1203 (1788). Salih Qaisarli, 1209 (1794). Abu Bakr Tarabulsi, 1211 (1796). _French Occupation._ Khosrev, 1216 (1802). Tahir, 1218 (1803). Ali Jaza'irli' or Tarabulsi, 1218 (1803). Khorshid, 1219 (1804). _(g) Hereditary Pashas (later Khedives), from 1220 (from 1805)._ Mehemet 'Ali, 1220-1264 (1805-1848). Ibrahim, 1264 (1848). 'Abbas I., 1264-1270 (1848-1854). Sa'id, 1270-1280 (1854-1863). Isma'il 1280-1300 (1863-1882). Tewfik, 1300-1309 (1882-1892). Abbas II., 1309 (1892). (3) _Period under Governors sent from the Metropolis of the eastern Caliphate._--The first governor of the newly acquired province was the conqueror 'Amr, whose jurisdiction was presently restricted to Lower Egypt; Upper Egypt, which was divided into three provinces, being assigned to Abdallah b. Sa'd, on whom the third caliph conferred the government of Lower Egypt also, 'Amr being recalled, owing to his unwillingness to extort from his subjects as much money as would satisfy the caliph. In the troubles which overtook the Islamic empire with the accession of Othman, Egypt was greatly involved, and it had to be reconquered from the adherents of Ali for Moawiya (Mo'awiyah) by 'Amr, who in A.H. 38 was rewarded for his services by being reinstated as governor, with the right to appropriate the surplus revenue instead of sending it as tribute to the metropolis. In the confusion which followed on the death of the Omayyad caliph Yazid the Egyptian Moslems declared themselves for Abdallah b. Z
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   332   333   334   335   336   337   338   339   340   341   342   343   344   345   346   347   348   349   350   351   352   353   354   355   356  
357   358   359   360   361   362   363   364   365   366   367   368   369   370   371   372   373   374   375   376   377   378   379   380   381   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Mahommed

 
Mustafa
 
Abdallah
 

Sharif

 
caliph
 
Tarabulsi
 

governor

 

Ibrahim

 

province

 

confusion


conqueror

 

restricted

 
Egyptian
 

divided

 
Moslems
 

jurisdiction

 

presently

 
declared
 

Period

 

Tewfik


Governors

 

Caliphate

 

eastern

 

Metropolis

 

provinces

 
acquired
 

metropolis

 

adherents

 
reconquered
 

revenue


Moawiya

 

greatly

 

involved

 

awiyah

 
rewarded
 

services

 

surplus

 

Othman

 

accession

 
government

conferred
 
recalled
 

sending

 

tribute

 

reinstated

 

Omayyad

 

unwillingness

 

troubles

 
overtook
 

Islamic