The governor of Damascus, al-Duzbari, finds the …
Years: 1034 - 1034
The governor of Damascus, al-Duzbari, finds the Mirdasid alliance with Constantinople to be unacceptable and calls for a jihad.
The imperial government announces their desire for a truce with al-Duzbari, causing Nasr to worry that he will be sacrificed by the Greeks to the Fatimids.
He, along with the Numayrids, Marwanids, and the Banu 'l-Djarrah and Kalb Arabs, sends envoys to Constantinople to determine the fate of the Muslims situated between the Fatimids and the Empire.
Nasr declares his submission to Romanos III, who claims Aleppo as under his protection.
The Fatimids refuse to accept this, however, and after Romanos III dies in 1034 his successor Michael IV recommends to Nasr that he accept Fatimid suzerainty.
Locations
People
- Constantine Dalassenos
- George Maniakes
- Michael IV the Paphlagonian
- Romanos III Argyros
- Shibl al-Dawla Nasr
Groups
- Arab people
- Christianity, Chalcedonian
- Islam
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Macedonian dynasty
- Fatimid Caliphate
- Mirdasid dynasty
- Aleppo, Mirdasid Emirate of
