Constantinople’s conquest of Armenia is short-lived. The…
1048 CE
Constantinople’s conquest of Armenia is short-lived.
The Seljuq Turks, whose conquests are to change the whole shape of the Muslim and Christian worlds, now make their appearance on the Armenian frontier, which is directly exposed to attack.
The late Seljuq had been chief of the Islamicized Oghuz Turkmen tribes in the Jand region.
Seljuq's two grandsons, Chaghri Beg and Tughril Beg, have enlisted Persian support to win realms of their own.
Tughril has occupied the Caspian areas of Khorasan, Rayy, and Hamadan and established his suzerainty over Isfahan.
A methodical ruler who has succeeded in building an empire by careful planning, Tughril leads the first Seljuq raid into Armenia in 1048.
Locations
Groups
Arab people
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Persian people
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Berber people (also called Amazigh people or Imazighen, "free men", singular Amazigh)
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Armenian people
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Khorasan, Greater
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Oghuz Turks
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Greeks, Medieval (Byzantines)
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Armeniac Theme
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Muslims, Sunni
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Muslims, Shi'a
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Abbasid Caliphate (Baghdad)
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Buyid dynasty
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Mazyadid (Al-Mazeedi) state of Iraq
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Turkmen people
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Fatimid Caliphate
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'Uqaylid Dynasty of Mosul
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Uqaylid Dynasty of Tikrit
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Armenia, Principalities of
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Seljuq Empire (Isfahan)
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Christians, Eastern Orthodox
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Roman Empire, Eastern: Non-dynastic and Comnenid dynasty
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