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The Fatimids:
The most stable of the
successor dynasties founded in the ninth and tenth centuries was
that of the Fatimids, a branch of Shi'is. The Fatimids won their
first success in North Africa, where they established a rival
caliphate at Raqqadah near Kairouan and, in 952, embarked on a
period of expansion that within a few years took them to Egypt.
Founded in
970, the mosque of al-Azhar
in Cairo is
one of the earliest and finest
examples of
the Egyptian style in Islamic architecture.
For a time the
Fatimids aspired to be rulers of the whole Islamic world, and their
achievements were impressive. At their peak they ruled North Africa,
the Red Sea coast, Yemen, Palestine, and parts of Syria. The
Fatimids built the Mosque of al-Azhar in Cairo - from which
developed al-Azhar University, now the oldest university in the
world and perhaps the most influential Islamic school of higher
learning. Fatimid merchants traded with Afghanistan and China and
tried to divert some of Baghdad's Arabian Gulf shipping to the Red
Sea.
But the Fatimids'
dreams of gaining control of the Islamic heartland came to nothing,
partly because many other independent states refused to support them
and partly because they, like the 'Abbasids in Baghdad, lost
effective control of their own mercenaries. Such developments
weakened the Fatimids, but thanks to a family of viziers of Armenian
origin they were able to endure until the Ayyubid succession in the
second half of the twelfth century - even in the face of the
eleventh-century invasion by the Seljuk Turks.

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