Emirate of Sabotah
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Emirate of Sabotah | |||||||||
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Status | Emirate | ||||||||
Capital | Maripoli | ||||||||
Common languages | Arabic and local languages | ||||||||
Religion | Islam | ||||||||
Government | Emirate | ||||||||
Emir | |||||||||
• 680–710 | Hassan ibn Asif Ahl Sabotah | ||||||||
• 710–732 | Muhammed ibn Hassan Ahl Sabotah | ||||||||
Legislature | Majlis as Shura | ||||||||
Historical era | Early Islamic | ||||||||
• Conquest by the Mutadinun Caliphate | 680 AD | ||||||||
• Second Shia Revolution | 712 AD | ||||||||
• Reconquest by Savotta | 732 AD | ||||||||
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Today part of | Salisford |
The Emirate of Sabotah was a Muslim emirate that ruled portions of what now is northern Salisford. The name Sabotah is derived from the original Romanyan province name for the area. The Emirate existed as as an autonomous Emirate of the Mutadinun Caliphate from 680 to 712, and after the Second Shia Revolution it broke off and became an independent nation. The Emir's rule ended in 732 AD, after it was conquered by its Christian neighbor, the Kingdom of Savotta.
The Emirate's rule, while short, has left a large impact on Salisford culturally, as the Norani trace their roots back to the Arabs who colonized northern Salisford during the Emirate's rule.