{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/699ed123123f9740822cddc9/69a1dc9b47697ac80374314f?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Fatimid Dynasty - Part 4: Crisis, Intrigue, and the Dimming of Power","description":"Famine stalks the Nile. Viziers plot in the palace shadows. As Egypt’s streets echo with the clash of rival armies, the Fatimid dynasty faces a reckoning. The splendor of the golden court is fading, replaced by fear and desperation. This is the long twilight of the Fatimid dream.\r\n\r\nBy the late eleventh century, the Fatimid caliphate was unraveling. Successions grew bloody, viziers rose and fell, and the authority of the caliph shriveled. The reign of al-Mustansir Billah captured the dynasty’s crisis. When the Nile failed, famine swept through Cairo, emptying markets and driving the desperate into the streets. The caliph sold palace treasures to pay mercenaries, but the army—split between Berber, Turkish, and Sudanese factions—turned the city into a battleground. Accounts from the era describe chaos: marble arcades deserted, once-lush gardens gone dry, and the court’s famed banquets reduced to memory. Provinces like Ifriqiya and Sicily slipped from Fatimid hands. Ambitious governors acted as kings in all but name, while the Seljuk Turks pressed from the east and Crusader armies landed on Mediterranean shores. Every new threat brought shifting alliances, desperate deals, and mounting paranoia.\r\n\r\nLearn more at: https://thelineagearchive.com/dynasty/fatimid-dynasty","author_name":"The Archive Network"}