Gazi Gümüshtigin

Emir Gümüshtigin Gazi (Turkish: Gümüştekin; also known as Emir Ghazi II or Melik Gazi; died 1134) was the second ruler of the Danishmend state which his father Danishmend Gazi had founded in central-eastern Anatolia after the Battle of Manzikert.

He succeeded his father when the latter died in 1104. In 1130, he allied with Leo I, Prince of Armenia against the crusader Bohemond II of Antioch, who was killed in the subsequent battle; Bohemond's head was embalmed and sent to the Abbasid caliph in Baghdad. Gümüshtigin may have been able to conquer more territory in the Principality of Antioch if not for the intervention of Byzantine emperor John II Comnenus, who wished to exert his own influence in Antioch.

In 1131, he besieged the castle of Kaysun (today near the village of Çakırhüyük) in the County of Edessa, but retreated upon the arrival of Count Joscelin, whom Gümüshtigin believed had already died.

Gümüshtigin died in 1134, and the Danishmend state began to collapse under pressure from the Byzantines and the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm.

References

    Preceded by
    Danishmend Gazi
    Melik of the Danishmends
    1104–1134
    Succeeded by
    Melik Mehmed Gazi
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.