-
homogeneous Lakhmid kingdom". This
situation is
exacerbated by the fact that the
historical sources—mostly Byzantine—start
dealing with the
Lakhmids in greater...
-
capital of the
Lakhmids, an Arab v****al
kingdom of the
Sasanian Empire, whom it
helped in
containing the
nomadic Arabs to the south. The
Lakhmid rulers of...
- and the
Byzantine Empire. The
Lakhmids contested control of the
Central Arabian tribes with the
Kindites with the
Lakhmids eventually destroying the Kingdom...
- and
Satala while their Gh****anid
allies defeated the Sasanian-aligned
Lakhmids. A
Sasanian victory at Callini**** in 531
continued the war for another...
- Byzantines, the
Lakhmids, and Yemen" SUNY Press, 11 Jun 2015 page 359 in "The
History of al-Tabari Vol. 5: The Sasanids, the Byzantines, the
Lakhmids, and Yemen"...
-
millennium BC. The Banu
Judham dwelt with
Lakhmids,
Azdis in
Syria and
later settled Northern Egypt with
Lakhmids. They were a
Qahtani Yemeni tribe in alliance...
- al-Qays (reigned ca. 390–418), king of the
Lakhmids Al-Nu'man II ibn al-Aswad (reigned 497–503), king of the
Lakhmids Al-Nu'man VI ibn al-Mundhir (active 581-583)...
- its
capital in al-Hira in Iraq (lower Mesopotamia). The
founder of the
Lakhmids'
kingdom was Amr ibn Adi ibn Nasr, who is
identified as the 'Amr ibn Lakhm'...
-
entirely removed the
Lakhmids from
power and
entrusted the rule of al-Hira to Iyas ibn
Qabisah al-Ta'i. This
marked the end of the
Lakhmid dynasty,
which had...
-
empire and the
Lakhmid Kingdom, the most
prominent of
which was the
invasion led by
Shapur II
against the
Lakhmids,
leading to
Lakhmids' defeat, and advancement...