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Summary Of: Yaghi-Siyan

in 1085 and appointed Yaghi-Siyan governor around 1090... granted Yaghi-Siyan more territory around... and Yaghi-Siyan became more amenable to an alliance... Yaghi-Siyan was left alone to fight the crusaders with only his personal army in Antioch... as Yaghi-Siyan considered them to be more loyal to him... and Yaghi-Siyan and his son Shams ad... Yaghi-Siyan knew from his informants that there were dissensions among the Christians... Yaghi-Siyan then turned to Ridwan for assistance... Yaghi-Siyan marched out to attack the foot... In March Yaghi-Siyan ambushed the crusaders who were bringing wood and other material back from the port of... and Yaghi-Siyan attacked the rest of the army under... and Yaghi-Siyan was once more pushed back into the city... Yaghi-Siyan fled with his bodyguard... Yaghi-Siyan fell from his horse...

Encyclodia Page On: Yaghi-Siyan

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June 2 | 1098 | Antioch | First Crusade | Turkish | slave | Seljuk sultan | Malik Shah I | Antioch | Tutush I | Manbij | Turbessel | Ridwan | Duqaq | Syria | Aleppo | Damascus | Aleppo | Ilghazi | Shaizar | siege | Greek Orthodox | Armenian Orthodox | Greek Patriarch | John the Oxite | stable | Syrian Orthodox | Antioch was besieged | Raymond IV of Toulouse | Bohemund of Taranto | December 29 | December 30 | Homs | Godfrey of Bouillon | Kerbogha | Mosul | Armenian | June 2 | Latin | Steven Runciman | Cambridge University Press | Ibn al-Qalanisi | Categories | 1098 deaths | Crusade people (Muslims) | Seljuk Turks | Turkic rulers | Turkish slaves |
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