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Video Summary
Maximum Extent
Maximum Extent (Interactive Map)

Data

Name: shaddadids

Type: Cluster

Start: 952 AD

End: 1124 AD

Statistics

All Statistics: All Statistics

Icon shaddadids

If you are looking for the page with the statistics about this nation you can find it here: All Statistics

The cluster includes all the forms of the country.

The cluster includes the following incarnations of the same nation:

  • Shaddadids
  • Shaddadids (Seljuk)
  • Establishment


  • January 952: Muhammad ibn Shaddad conquers Dwin.
  • Chronology


    Interactive Chronologies with maps are available in the section Changes Navigation

    1. Byzantine-Georgian wars


    Were a series of conflicts between the Byzantine Empire and the Kingdom of Georgia.

    1.1.Georgian campaigns of Basil II

    Was a military campaign by Byzantine emperor Basil II in Georgia.

  • January 1022: The Ardzruni kingdom of Vaspurakan was annexed by the Byzantine Empire.

  • 2. Conquests of Malik Shah I


    Expansion during the rule of Malik Shah I in the Seljuk Empire.

  • January 1076: In 1075 Seljuk ruler Alp Arslan annexed the last of the Shaddadid territories. A cadet branch of Shaddadids continued to rule in Ani and Tbilisi.

  • 3. Georgian-Seljuk wars


    Were a series of military conflicts between the Seljuk Empire and its vassals against the Kingdom of Georgia.

    3.1.Georgian Reconquista

    Were a series of military campaigns by the Kingdom of Georgia to reconquer lands controlled by the Seljukids and their vassals.

  • January 1116: Following the annexation of Kakheti, in 1105, David routed a Seljuk punitive force at the Battle of Ertsukhi, leading to momentum that helped him to secure the key fortresses of Samshvilde, Rustavi, Gishi, and Lori between 1110 and 1118.
  • August 1121: King David routed the enemy army on the fields of Didgori, with fleeing Seljuq Turks being run down by pursuing Georgian cavalry for several days. A huge amount of booty and prisoners were captured by David's army, which had also secured Tbilisi, the last Muslim enclave remaining from the Arab occupation.
  • January 1125: Georgian forces took the Armenian city of Ani from the Muslim emirs, thus expanding the borders of the kingdom to the Araxes basin.
  • January 1125: In 1124, Georgian king David conquered Shirvan and took the Armenian city of Ani from the Muslim emirs.

  • 4. Further events (Unrelated to Any War)


  • January 972: In 971, Lashkari ibn Muhammad, a member of the Shaddadid dynasty, established himself in Ganja.

  • January 984: With the weakening of the buyid power after the death of Adud ad-Daula after 983, the Kurdish Marwan tribe under Badh, a former shepherd, gained control of Mayyafariqin and the areas of Amida and Nusaybin.

  • January 1015: Kvirike III declared himself King of Kakheti and Hereti.

  • January 1046: Establishment of the Kingdom of Artsakh and end of Bagratid Armenia.

  • January 1046: After the fall of the Bagratid Kingdom of Armenia in 1045, Kiurike II was bestowed by the Byzantines with the title of Kouropalates and became an independent ruler in the region of Tashir.

  • January 1046: The British Encyclopedia ranks the Syunik kingdom among those Armenian state formations that survived after the fall of the centralized Armenian kingdom.

  • January 1073: In 1072, the Seljuks sold Ani to the Shaddadid emir of Manuchihr.

  • Disestablishment


  • January 1125: In 1124, Georgian king David conquered Shirvan and took the Armenian city of Ani from the Muslim emirs.
  • January 1125: Georgian forces took the Armenian city of Ani from the Muslim emirs, thus expanding the borders of the kingdom to the Araxes basin.
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