RMBP26WJ–1272. HORDE OF MAMLUK GOLD COINS FOUND IN JERUSALEM
RM2M98AAH–Mameluke (Mamluk), Middle East.
RMDCYT7J–19th century - The Mamluk Roustam - Jacques-Nicolas Paillot de Montabert 1806 - Musée de l'armée Paris France oil on canvas
RMHTMJ1P–Mamluk (Mameluke) of Ottoman Imperial Guard. When Napoleon invaded Egypt it was the Mamluks who fought him. Mamluks lost power in massacre of 1811 instigated by Muhammad Ali Pasha (1769-1849) Aquatint c1820
RMBHEAP2–Brass bowl, inlaid with silver, a votive inscription, early 14th c. Mamluk. Cairo, Egypt.
RM2B00W09–Syria: A Mamluk governor, or ‘na-ib’, and his retinue receive Venetian consul Niccolo Malipiero in Damascus in 1511. Workshop of Gentile Bellini (c. 1429-1507), 16th century Mamluks were originally soldiers or slaves who converted to Islam. A Mamluk army seized control of Egypt and Syria and established the ‘Mamluk Sultanate’ from 1250 to 1517 during which time they defeated or repelled Mongol invaders and Christian crusaders.
RMJMD8H0–The death of Quṭb al-Dīn Aibak as a result of a fall from his horse while playing Chaugan. Quṭb al-Dīn Aibak also spelt Quṭb ud-Dīn Aibak or Qutub ud-Din Aybak, 1150–1210. Founder of the Mamluk dynasty of the Delhi Sultanate. From Hutchinson's History of the Nations, published 1915.
RMBC95CA–A Sotheby’s employee holding a rare Mamluk Glass Bucket known as the Rothschild Bucket part of “Arts of the Islamic World' sale
RMT4T0H9–Old Mamluk stone bridge in Nahr el Kalb, Lebanon
RMKGY0XB–View from Cairo Citadel, Egypt in the 19th century
RMEB2HNP–light rays in mausoleum window, complex of Faraj ibn Barquq, Northern Cemetery, Cairo, Egypt
RMC4BJXR–Fatimid and Mamluk pottery shards worth £10,000 forming part of a Christies auction of Islamic and Indian Art
RMD95X70–Iron helmet with calligraphic silver damascening decoration. Turkish (Mamluk) 15th century
RMPC14EG–294 Illustration-mamluk-lamps
RMDT8Y3J–Mamluk on horseback, ca 1825. Artist: Anonymous
RM2J6R40D–Bottle decorated with Chinese lions, 14th century. Mamluk period (1250-1517). Egypt (or Syria). Gilded and enamelled glass. Calouste Gulbenkian Museum. Lisbon, Portugal.
RF2JWG5Y3–The 1910 caption for this image reads: 'The grave of a Mameluke sultan in Cairo. Mamluk, also spelled Mameluke, slave soldier, a member of one of the armies of slaves established during the Abbasid era that later won political control of several Muslim states. Under the Ayyubid sultanate, Mamluk generals used their power to establish a dynasty that ruled Egypt and Syria from 1250 to 1517. The name is derived from an Arabic word for slave.
RMTAT31R–A Mamluk mace, 18th century, Forged iron, the six flanges of semicircular form, topped by a half bronze orb, long, partially facetted socket, gilt bronze ring over silver ferrule, gold inlaid flower ornaments, the hardwood grip with pierced hole for a lanyard. Length 64 cm. Provenance: From Napoleon's Egyptian campaign 1798 - 1801. A very similar Mamluk mace is housed in the Musée de l'Armée in Paris (K843-A12694) and is depicted and described in 'Les armées francaises à L'époque révolutionnaire', published by the Musée de l'Armée Paris 1989, p., Additional-Rights-Clearance-Info-Not-Available
RMCY77KA–Vase with Handles Mamluk 14th Century Glass Syria Syrian
RMPEDNR3–Color print depicting the external facade of the fifteenth-century funerary complex of Sultan al-Ashraf Qaytbay in Cairo, Egypt, built in the Mamluk style, with characteristically high arches and the ablaq technique which layers light and dark blocks of stone, 1912. Courtesy Internet Archive. ()
RMDRDN2W–A Mamluk of Cairo, Egypt
RM2A9281G–Italy Piedmont Turin - Mazzonis Palace - Mao Museum ( Museo d'Arte Orientale ) - Museum of Oriental art - Mosque lamp - Egypt - Mamluk Dynasty - Mid-14th century - The Inscription on the neck of the lamp states ' Allah is the light of the heavens and heart. His Light is like that of a niche where a lamp is found [...]'
RMHTMHTB–Mamluk (Mameluke) of Ottoman Imperial Guard. When Napoleon invaded Egypt it was the Mamluks who fought him. Mamluks lost power in massacre of 1811 instigated by Muhammad Ali Pasha (1769-1849) Aquatint c1820
RMBHE8H5–The Mosque and Madrasa of Sultan Hassan, 1356-63, the courtyard Mamluk period Cairo Egypt
RM2B01KBT–Egypt/Syria: Mamluk cavalry. An illustration from the 'Complete Instructions in the Practices of Military Art' attributed to Muhammad Ibn Isa Aqsarai, c. 1375-1400. The Nihāyat al-su’l wa-al-umniyah fī ta‘allum a‘māl al-furūsīyah by Muḥammad ibn ‘Īsá Aqsarā’ī is one of the best known works of cavalry training from the Islamic Middle East. It was compiled during the time of the Mamluk Sultanate (1250-1517), however, most of the book consists of material from earlier works. Some date back to the time of the Abbasid Caliphs of Baghdad in the 9th or even late 8th century.
RMC0FW6F–Al-Aqsa Mosque in the Old City of Jerusalem, Palestine, as it was in the 19th century.
RF2BM014T–Riders from the people of Mamluk, Mamluks, Mamluk, Mamelukes, Mamelukes Mamelukes, Mama hatches, Mamalukken or Ghilman, Gilman were, in many Islamic dominions military slaves of Central Asian or Eastern European, mostly of Turkish or Caucasian, origin / Reiter aus dem Volk der Mamluk, Mamluken, Mamluken, Mameluken, Mamelucken, Mamelukken, Mamaluken, Mamalukken, oder Ghilman, Gilman, waren in vielen islamischen Herrschaftsgebieten Militärsklaven zentralasiatischer oder osteuropäischer, meist türkischer oder kaukasischer, Herkunft, Historisch, historical, digital improved reproduction of an or
RMD7BCPW–mamluk architecture in the old city
RMKGY0X1–The leap of the Mamluk bey, massacre of the Mamluks at the Cairo citadel, Egypt, 1 March 1811
RMCP4D1J–EGYPT CAIRO CITY 'OF THE DEAD TOMBS Mamluk
RM2D0MGGD–interior of mausoleum, Mamluk Complex of Sultan Barquq, Cairo, Egypt
RMF7NTWP–14th century manuscript depicting The battle in the valley of El Khaznadar, also known as, the Third Battle of Homs, between the Mongolian army Ilhan Gazan and Mamluk army. The Mamluks were defeated. Dated 14th Century
RM2HAYC5K–Kahta castle, Old Kahta, Mamluk Sultanate, Kahta, Adıyaman province, Turkey, Asia
RMDT8Y3K–Mamluk standard-bearer in combat, 1818. Artist: Heath, William (1795-1840)
RM2J6R407–Beaker decorated with flying birds. First half of the 14th century. Mamluk period (1250-1517). Egypt (or Syria). Gilded and enamelled glass. Calouste Gulbenkian Museum. Lisbon, Portugal.
RFMC8TBR–This photo dates to around 1900 and shows the Tombs of the Mamluks in Cairo. The Mamluks were slave soldiers and served the Muslim caliphs and the Ottoman Empire. As the decades passed they became a powerful caste, on accasion, seizing power for themselves. The Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt began in 1250 and ended in 1517 when the Ottomans took control of Egypt. Toward the end of the 14th century, the Mamluk rulers began looking for a new necropolis for themselves and established a cemetery in northern Cairo, the area known as Qarafa. The area is also known as the City of the Dead and the Cairo Ne
RMTAT309–A Mamluk mace, 18th century, Forged iron, the six flanges of semicircular form, topped by a half bronze orb, long, partially facetted socket, gilt bronze ring over silver ferrule, gold inlaid flower ornaments, the hardwood grip with pierced hole for a lanyard. Length 64 cm. Provenance: From Napoleon's Egyptian campaign 1798 - 1801. A very similar Mamluk mace is housed in the Musée de l'Armée in Paris (K843-A12694) and is depicted and described in 'Les armées francaises à L'époque révolutionnaire', published by the Musée de l'Armée Paris 1989, p., Additional-Rights-Clearance-Info-Not-Available
RMCY77KN–Vase with Handles Mamluk 14th Century Glass Syria Syrian
RMB77MN2–Paulus-Chapel in the Mamluk town gate Bab Qaysan, Damascus, Syria, Middle East, Orient
RMDRDN30–Female Mamluk of Cairo, Egypt
RMKC771Y–Mosque Lamp Bearing the Name of the Mamluk Sultan al-Malik al-Nasir, ca. 1340
RMBP5N3B–Israel, Jerusalem, Mamluk building at the Old City
RFG458F3–Murad Bey Muhammad, Mamluk Emir ruler of Egypt, engraving portrait
RM2B01KBN–Egypt/Syria: Mamluk cavalry. An illustration from the 'Complete Instructions in the Practices of Military Art' attributed to Muhammad Ibn Isa Aqsarai, c. 1375-1400. The Nihāyat al-su’l wa-al-umniyah fī ta‘allum a‘māl al-furūsīyah by Muḥammad ibn ‘Īsá Aqsarā’ī is one of the best known works of cavalry training from the Islamic Middle East. It was compiled during the time of the Mamluk Sultanate (1250-1517), however, most of the book consists of material from earlier works. Some date back to the time of the Abbasid Caliphs of Baghdad in the 9th or even late 8th century.
RMBGKEDX–A mounted mamluk in Cairo.
RM2M7853B–Brown Glazed Pottery Hesban, Ajlon Ayyubid - Mamluk Period
RM2WAR6HW–Full-length Portrait of Mamluk aka Mamaluk, Mameluke or Mameluk, Mercenary, Slave soldier or Freed Slave Fighting for Muslim Armies in the Middle East during the Middle Ages. c19th coloured engraving or illustration.
RMPEDP10–Color print depicting an early 20th-century street scene in the Sayeda Zainab quarter of old Cairo, Egypt, with a saddled camel seated in front of the high, arched entrance portal to a Mamluk style mosque, with its characteristic ablaq decorative technique layering light and dark blocks of stone, 1912. Courtesy Internet Archive. ()
RMBC95GN–A Mamluk gilded and enamelled Glass Bucket known as the Rothschild Bucket at Sotheby’s London “Arts of the Islamic World” sale
RMED5GKD–neo-Mamluk villa by the Italian architect Lasciac, Nova Gorica/Gorizia, Slovenia
RMD989AR–The impact of Chinese blue and white on Mamluk potters
RM2HAYC5F–Kahta castle, Old Kahta, Mamluk Sultanate, Kahta, Adıyaman province, Turkey, Asia
RM2WEJ6BM–The Mosque of Sultan Hassan, built between 1356 and 1363 during the Bahri Mamluk period, Cairo, Egypt.
RMD3YJR1–Islamic art. Syria. Bosra. Hammab Manshak. Old public baths. Mamluk era. 14th century. View. Ruins.
RFMC8T0W–This illustration dates to around 1900. It shows a window in the complex of the Sultan al-Mansur Qalawun (also spelled Kilawun). It is located on al-Muizz li-Din Allah Street, in an area that used to be part of the Western Fatimid Palace in Cairo, Egypt. It dates to A.D. 1285 and the Mamluk period in Egypt. The master architect was Amir Alam al-Din al-Shuja'i. The complex includes a mausoleum, a madrasa, and a hospital. It is made of stone and comprises vertical arched recesses borne by marble pillars within which are windows (one shown here) decorated with interlaced geometric shapes.
RMGD272B–weapons / arms, protective arms, helmets, Mamluk helmet, iron with brass fitings, Egypt, 15th century, Damascus National Museum, craft, Islamic, nasal helmet, fitting, war, warfare, historic, historical, middle ages, Additional-Rights-Clearences-Not Available
RMMHGBBA–Bottle 14th Century Mamluk period ( gilded and enamelled glas Egypt , Egyptian, ( or Syria - Syrian )
RF2RX2EC7–The Mosque of Sultan Hassan, built between 1356 and 1363 during the Bahri Mamluk period, Cairo, Egypt, North Africa, Africa
RMPB9YKN–Hand cannon made for the Mamluk Emir Kertbey al-Ahmar
RMKC733R–Mamluk Carpet, early 16th century, Attributed to probably Egypt, probably Cairo, Wool, (warp, weft and pile); asymmetrically
RMBP5MTG–Israel, Jerusalem, Mamluk building at the Old City
RMDDT3FM–Murad Bey, 18th century (1822). Artist: Nicolas Ponce
RM2B00W0K–Egypt/ Maghreb: An illustration from a 1371 Mamluk cavalry manual of military training exercises using Barb stallion mounts. During the period of Arab expansion into North Africa, cavalry was often mounted on small, agile horses called ‘Berbers’, or ‘Barbs’. Known for speed, endurance and courage in war, the Barb was an important component of the Arab forces.
RM2C75G09–The Aqaba Castle, Mamluk Castle or Aqaba Fort, Aqaba, Jordan. From Monuments de Tous les Peuples, published 1843.
RM2X0GWDP–Mamluk tombs in a mosque in Cairo. [automated translation]
RM2B2AK91–Mamluk Soldier in Traditional Costume Musée de l'Empéri, or Emperi Military Museum, Salon-de-Provence Provence France
RMBH0A87–Israel, Yavne (Ibelin), the remains of the mamluk fortress at Tel Yavne
RM2G7G38X–The Jump of the Mamluk in the Citadel of Cairo, Egypt, North Africa. Old 19th century engraved illustration from El Mundo Ilustrado 1880
RM2JYY52A–Loggia, of the Summer House of the Mamluk, Radnau Bey's House, Cairo, Egypt. 1870. By Frank Dillon
RM2HAYC5J–Kahta castle, Old Kahta, Mamluk Sultanate, Kahta, Adıyaman province, Turkey, Asia
RF2HK9D1P–Inspired by In the background it is possible to see the domes of the mosque of Mamluk. seated figures and a camel near the Citadel of Cairo. Caïro, Reimagined by Artotop. Classic art reinvented with a modern twist. Design of warm cheerful glowing of brightness and light ray radiance. Photography inspired by surrealism and futurism, embracing dynamic energy of modern technology, movement, speed and revolutionize culture
RMHG33XC–Mamluk Coin of Sha'ban II
RFMC8T3M–This illustration dates to around 1900. It shows a window in the complex of the Sultan al-Mansur Qalawun (also spelled Kilawun). It is located on al-Muizz li-Din Allah Street, in an area that used to be part of the Western Fatimid Palace in Cairo, Egypt. It dates to A.D. 1285 and the Mamluk period in Egypt. The master architect was Amir Alam al-Din al-Shuja'i. The complex includes a mausoleum, a madrasa, and a hospital. It is made of stone and comprises vertical arched recesses borne by marble pillars (seen here) within which are windows decorated with interlaced geometric shapes.
RMGD272E–weapons / arms, protective arms, helmets, Mamluk helmet, iron with brass fitings, Egypt, 15th century, Damascus National Museum, craft, Islamic, nasal helmet, fitting, war, warfare, historic, historical, middle ages, Additional-Rights-Clearences-Not Available
RMMHGBB8–Mosque Lamp 14th Century Mamluk period ( gilded and enamelled glas Egypt , Egyptian, ( or Syria - Syrian )
RF2RX2ECF–The Mosque of Sultan Hassan, built between 1356 and 1363 during the Bahri Mamluk period, Cairo, Egypt, North Africa, Africa
RM2F5YYEF–The old Mamluk stone bridge and the 17-arches Roman aqueduct in Nahr el Kalb, Lebanon
RM2A2HN33–Fragment, Mamluk period (1250–1517), 15th century, Egypt, Egypt, Linen, plain weave, embroidered, 33 × 22.9 cm (13 × 9 in
RMBP5MK9–Israel, Jerusalem, Mamluk building at the Old City
RMCT088M–Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, Islamic Arts Museum, Mamluk-style marble mosaic fountain,
RM2B00NYP–Egypt/France: Murad Bey (1750 – 1801). Illustration by André Dutertre (1753-1842), 1809. Murad Bey (c. 1750 – 1801) was an Egyptian Mamluk chieftain (Bey), cavalry commander and joint ruler of Egypt with Ibrahim Bey. He was of Georgian origin having been born in Tbilisi. Following his defeat at the hands of Napoleon's armies at the Battle of the Pyramids, Murad fled to Upper Egypt, mounting a brief guerrilla campaign that staved off Desaix for a year. In 1800, Murad made peace with Jean Baptiste Kléber, and agreed to garrison Cairo, but died of bubonic plague on the journey there.
RM2ACDC0W–The Battle of the Pyramids, aka the Battle of Embabeh, July 21, 1798, between the French army in Egypt under Napoleon Bonaparte, and forces of the local Mamluk rulers.
RFP3R0RA–Aqaba Fortress, Mamluk Castle or Aqaba Fort located in Aqaba city, Jordan
RMDF1G5R–One of Albuquerque's ships in the Portuguese attack on Aden, 1513. Hand-colored woodcut
RM2GBKN5G–Egypt, Cairo. Courtyard and ablution fountain in the Mosque-Madrasa of Sultan Hassan. Engraving. La Ilustración Española y Americana, 1882.
RM2G87G17–The Jump of the Mamluk in the Citadel of Cairo, Egypt, North Africa. Old 19th century engraved illustration from El Mundo Ilustrado 1880
RM2DE5DF4–Mosque of Imam al-Shafi'i, 19th century Mamluk revival building, Cairo, Egypt
RM2JYY52B–Room inside the Summer House of the Mamluk, Radnau Bey's House, Cairo, Egypt. 1870. By Frank Dillon
RM2HAYC5H–Kahta castle, Old Kahta, Mamluk Sultanate, Kahta, Adıyaman province, Turkey, Asia
RF2HK4PDK–Inspired by Folio from a Qur'an, Ink on paper, 14th century, Mamluk, 13 1/5 in. x 5 1/5 in, Reimagined by Artotop. Classic art reinvented with a modern twist. Design of warm cheerful glowing of brightness and light ray radiance. Photography inspired by surrealism and futurism, embracing dynamic energy of modern technology, movement, speed and revolutionize culture
RMHF9K1D–Mamluk Coin of Baybars I
RMAHEPY4–Koran Page 1280 Back
RMCP1BDW–fireworks, Mamluk pyrotechnists, above: with protective clothes made of asbestos, below: with skyrockets, miniature, Egypt, 14th century, historic, historical, mamluq, mamluke, mameluk, mameluke, mamaluke, marmeluke, marmaduke, orient, Arabia, Middle Ages, illumination, Islamic art, Moslem, Muslim, Moslems, Muslims, rockets, rocket, skyrocket, medieval, people, Additional-Rights-Clearences-Not Available
RMC2KDD9–Hama Water Mill Noria 20 meter high Syria Orontes River build in Ottoman Mamluk times Greeks Romans invented the water wheel
RF2RX2EF7–The Mosque of Sultan Hassan, built between 1356 and 1363 during the Bahri Mamluk period, Cairo, Egypt, North Africa, Africa
RMT4T0JX–The old Mamluk stone bridge and the 17-arches Roman aqueduct in Nahr el Kalb, Lebanon
RM2A2HRJW–Fragment, Mamluk period (1250– 1517), 13th/14th century, Egypt, Egypt, 8.7 × 9 cm (3 3/8 × 3 1/2 in
RMBP5MP8–Israel, Jerusalem, Mamluk building at the Old City
RMA49KER–Mamluk fort Aqaba Jordan Middle East
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