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Al-Sa'id Baraka

Sultan of Egypt and Syria (r. 1277–1279)

Al-Sa'id Baraka

Sultan of Egypt and Syria (r. 1277–1279)

FieldValue
nameAl-Sa'id Baraka
titleal-Malik al-Sa'id Nasir al-Din
imageBarakah coin.jpg
captionA dinar of Mamluk Sultan Baraka minted in Alexandria in 1277/78
successionSultan of Egypt
reign3 July 1277 – August 1279
native_lang1Birth name
native_lang1_name1Muhammed Baraka Qan
محمد بركة قان
native_lang2Royal name
native_lang2_name1al-Malik al-Sa'id Nasir al-Din Baraka
الملك السعيد ناصر الدين بركة
predecessorAl-Zahir Baibars al-Bunduqdari
successorBadr al-Din Solamish
spouseGhaziya Khatun
houseZahiri
dynastyBahri
fatheral-Zahir Baibars al-Bunduqdari
birth_date1260
birth_placeCairo, Egypt
death_date
death_placeAl Karak, Jordan
religionIslam

محمد بركة قان الملك السعيد ناصر الدين بركة

Dominion of Bahri Mamluks ( red )

Al-Sa'id Baraka (1260–1280; birthname: Muhammed Baraka Qan (), royal name: al-Malik al-Sa'id Nasir al-Din Baraka (الملك السعيد ناصر الدين بركة) was a Turkic Sultan who ruled from 1277 to 1279 after the death of his father Baibars. His mother was a daughter of Barka Khan, a former Khwarazmian emir.

Baraka was born in Cairo, Egypt. His succession went smoothly, and he set about limiting the power of the emirs from his father's administration. One, his father's viceroy, died under suspicious circumstances. Others were jailed and then released. In their place, Baraka promoted his own mamluks. He also sent Qalawun and Baysari, two of the most powerful emirs, to raid Cilician Armenia and Qal'at al-Rum in 1279, as a way of keeping them busy and away from the seat of power. Each had 10,000 troops. Baraka's plan was to have both of them arrested on their return, but another amir, Kuvenduk, warned them of the plan, and when they returned, Baraka was forced to abdicate. His seven-year-old brother Sulamish was placed on the throne in his place, under the guardianship of Qalawun, who became the effective sultan.

Personal life

His only wife was Ghaziya Khatun. She was the daughter of Sultan Qalawun. She was betrothed to him on 28 May 1276, with a dowry of five thousand dinars. The wedding took place on 8 June 1277. She died in August 1288.

Death

Exiled to Al Karak fortress, in Jordan, he died there in 1280.

References

  • Reuven Amitai-Preiss (1995), Mongols and Mamluks: The Mamluk-Īlkhānid War, 1260-1281, pp. 179–225. Cambridge University Press, .

References

  1. Burgoyne, Michael Hamilton. (1987). "Mamluk Jerusalem". British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem by the World of Islam Festival Trust.
  2. Northrup, Linda. (1998). "From Slave to Sultan: The Career of al-Mansur Qaldwun and the Consolidation of Mamluk Rule in Egypt and Syria (678-689 A.H./1279-1290 A.D.)".
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