Saljuqid
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Saljuq + -id, from Arabic سَلْجُوق (Saljūq) and Persian سلجوق (Saljuq).
Adjective
[edit]Saljuqid (not comparable)
- (historical) Alternative form of Seljukid, of or related to Seljuk, his dynasty, their empire, or their period of rule.
- 1936, Henry George Farmer, “Turkish Instruments of Music in the Seventeenth Century”, in Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society[1], page 27:
- The pirinj būrū پرنج بورو [brass trumpet]. Invented by the Saljuqid Arslān Shāh at Konia.
- 1973, Proceedings[2], page 117:
- During the Saljuqid Period the society was composed of essentially two classes: [...]
- 1982, Encyclopædia Iranica[3], volume 13, page 230:
- This victory ended the influence of Byzantine emperors in Armenia and the rest of Caucasus and Azerbaijan, and spread the fame of the Saljuqid king in the Muslim world.
- 2003, Peter G. Riddell, Peter Cotterell, Islam in Context: Past, Present, and Future[4]:
- The Saljuqid Empire expanded during the period that the Abbasid dynasty was declining.
- 2016, Patrick Wing, The Jalayirids[5], Edinburgh University Press:
- Although the suppression of the revolt of Sharaf al-Dīn Masʽūd helped to consolidate the position of the Saljuqid governor Muʽīn al-Dīn Sulaymān, known as parvāna, in Anatolia, it had also demonstrated that the parvāna was dependent on Ilkhanid military support to maintain that position.
- 2020, John Renard, Crossing Confessional Boundaries[6], page 79:
- During the decades following the Saljuqid victory over Byzantine forces at Manzikert (1071), contingents of Muslim Turkmen gradually moved westward across the anciently Christian religious landscape of Anatolia.
Noun
[edit]Saljuqid (plural Saljuqids)
- (historical) Alternative form of Seljukid, a member of the Seljuk dynasty or a person of their empire.
- 1967, Michaël I. Zand, Six Centuries of Glory[7], page 79:
- In this way, glorification of the Fatimids was the poet's method of promulgating Ismailism among those who were discontended with the Saljuqids.
- 1971, The Islamic Literature[8], volume 17, page 33:
- The vast empire of the Saljuqids had disintegrated and a larger portion of it had passed to Muʼayyid who had established himself in Nīshāpūr.
- 1990, Derek Hopwood, editor, Studies in Arab History: the Antonius Lectures, 1978–87[9], page 10:
- Badr was governor over several provinces for thirty-two years; and Nizam, for thirty years, a prime minister under two of the great Saljuqids.
- 2015, Oliver Leaman, editor, The Biographical Encyclopedia of Islamic Philosophy[10], page 368:
- He served possibly as a tax collector first under the Ghaznavids and then the Saljuqids.
- 2018, Hamid Dabashi, Truth and Narrative[11]:
- Dubays ibn Ṣadaqa finally lost his head to a Saljuqid.
- 2019, Surinder Singh, The Making of Medieval Panjab[12]:
- The new ruler Bahram Shah (r. 1117–57), having received the assistance of the Saljuqids, accepted their overlordship.
Categories:
- English terms suffixed with -id
- English terms borrowed from Arabic
- English terms derived from Arabic
- English terms borrowed from Persian
- English terms derived from Persian
- English lemmas
- English adjectives
- English uncomparable adjectives
- English words containing Q not followed by U
- English terms with historical senses
- English terms with quotations
- English nouns
- English countable nouns