The role of the Bani Buyh and Seljuk ministers in managing the affairs of the Abbasid state (a comparative study)
- Author:
- Saja Mahdi Saleh Saleh
- Level:
- Master
- Field of study:
- Islamic History
- Language:
- Arabic
- Faculty:
- Faculty of History
- Year:
- 2022
- Publisher:
- URD Press
- Supervisor(s):
- Ahmad Hatif Al-Mafraji
The idea of this research revolves around the management of the affairs of the Abbasid state by the ministers of Banu Buyah and the Seljuks, so it was a major motive in choosing this study to show the role of each of the Buyid and Seljuk ministers in the administration of the Abbasid state, i.e. a comparison between the Ministry of the Buyer and the Ministry of the Seljuks in the Abbasid Caliphate in Baghdad and the ways The interference of these two forces in the affairs of the Arab Islamic Caliphate in the Abbasid era, and one of the most important reasons that made me research this subject is the change that occurred in the Abbasid Caliphate and led to its weakness and the dissolution of the administrative systems. The control of these two ministries over the Abbasid state through several axes and axes, including the economic axis and how the Boyeh and Seljuk ministers sought to calculate the income and we highlight another axis, the military axis in terms of the arrangement of the army and the organization of its ranks and how the army succeeded in seizing Mosul after defeating the Seljuks near Sinjar In the year 448 AH – and he was preparing to enter Baghdad. As for the judicial axis, how they worked to arrange the judiciary and the judge to carry out his duties and punish the defaulters and outlaws The bad was in the Seljuk ministry or in the boyish ministry. As for the religious axis, the Seljuks were from the origin of the Sunni sect. As for the sons, they were from the Shiite sect. The impact of these doctrines on the people in the Abbasid caliphate in the administration. The researcher used the comparative historical method and in conclusion, the The researcher concluded that the positions in the Buyids and Seljuks eras were hereditary in the family, and also that the judicial authorities were not granted complete autonomy by the Buyids and the Seljuks because they are an essential and essential part of the class of scholars, and there was a difference of course in the economic and other aspects between the Buyids and the Seljuks.