Abstract is: Sitt al-Mulk (Arabic: ست الملك, lit. 'Lady of the Kingdom'; 970–1023), was a Fatimid princess. After the disappearance of her half-brother, the caliph al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, in 1021, she was instrumental in securing the succession of her nephew Ali az-Zahir, and acted as the de facto ruler of the state until her death on 5 February 1023.
human | Q5 |
P1871 | CERL Thesaurus ID | cnp01101854 |
P646 | Freebase ID | /m/06m2dy |
P227 | GND ID | 133121380 |
P12582 | Oxford Reference overview ID | 20110803100509147 |
P1185 | Rodovid ID | 1218796 |
P214 | VIAF ID | 28251271 |
P7859 | WorldCat Identities ID (superseded) | viaf-28251271 |
P1343 | described by source | Dictionary of African Biography | Q46002746 |
P22 | father | Al-Aziz Billah | Q286542 |
P97 | noble title | princess | Q863048 |
P106 | occupation | politician | Q82955 |
P5008 | on focus list of Wikimedia project | gender gap on Dutch Wikipedia | Q60687720 |
P39 | position held | regent | Q477406 |
Queen Mother | Q10477002 | ||
P21 | sex or gender | female | Q6581072 |
P3373 | sibling | Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah | Q342137 |
Q286542 | Al-Aziz Billah | child | P40 |
Q342137 | Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah | sibling | P3373 |
Arabic (ar / Q13955) | ست الملك | wikipedia |
Egyptian Arabic (arz / Q29919) | ست الملك | wikipedia |
Catalan (ca / Q7026) | Sitt-al-Mulk | wikipedia |
Sitt al-Mulk | wikipedia | |
Sitt al-Mulk | wikipedia | |
Sitt al-Mulk | wikipedia | |
Sitt al-Mulk | wikipedia | |
Sitt al-Mulk | wikipedia | |
Sitt al-Mulk | wikipedia | |
Sitt al-Mulk | wikipedia | |
pnb | ست الملک | wikipedia |
Sital Mulque | wikipedia | |
Serbo-Croatian (sh / Q9301) | Sitt al-Mulk | wikipedia |
Sitt al-Mulk | wikipedia | |
Urdu (ur / Q1617) | ست الملک | wikipedia |
uz | Sitt Al-Mulk | wikipedia |
Search more.