Fatimid dynasty Article

Fāṭimid dynasty summary

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Fāṭimid dynasty, (909–1171) Ismāʿīli Shīʿite dynasty of North Africa and the Middle East. Its members traced their descent from Fāṭimah, a daughter of the Prophet Muhammad. As Shīʿite Muslims, they opposed the Sunnite caliphate of the ʿAbbāsid dynasty, which they were determined to supplant. From Yemen they expanded into North Africa and Sicily, and in 909 their imam emerged to proclaim the new dynasty. The first four Fāṭimid caliphs ruled from Tunisia, but the conquest of Egypt in 969 occasioned the building of a new capital, Cairo. At its height, the dynasty controlled Mecca and Medina, Syria, Palestine, and Africa’s Red Sea coast. Seeking to overthrow the ʿAbbāsids, the Fāṭimids maintained a network of missionaries and agents in ʿAbbāsid territories (see Assassin). In 1057–59 the Fāṭimid caliph was briefly proclaimed in Baghdad, the ʿAbbāsid capital, but Fāṭimid fortunes declined thereafter. Attacks by Crusaders, Turks, and Byzantines and factionalism in the armed forces weakened the caliphate; disputes over succession to the title of caliph led to the dynasty’s final end, however, as many of the Asian missionaries broke away, and the central government came to rely on non-Ismāʿīlī troops. The last caliph died in 1171, and the dynasty was succeeded by the Sunnite Ayyūbid dynasty.