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Mamluk Armour
Image by Richard Mortel

Mamluk Armour

Richly decorated Mamluk armour from Syria or Egypt, c. 1500 CE. Collection of the Arms and Armor Museum, Vienna.
Mamluk Training with a Lance
Image by David Samling

Mamluk Training with a Lance

Mamluk lance practice from a Furusiyya manuscript. Egypt or Syria; c. 1500 CE, Leaf: 24 × 16.7 cm, David Collection.
Mamluk Axe
Image by Metropolitan Museum of Art

Mamluk Axe

Wood-handled steel axe with gold decoration, engraved with the insignia of a Mamluk emir who held the honour of being cupbearer to the sultan. Used by a member of an axe-bearing corps, possibly similar to the Varangian Guard which protected...
Mamluk Lancers
Image by Daniel Hopfer

Mamluk Lancers

Hopfer, Daniel (c. 1470-1536 CE): Etching, Three Mamelukes with lances on horseback.
Mamluk or Ottoman Cavalry
Image by Richard Mortel

Mamluk or Ottoman Cavalry

Armour for a cavalryman and his horse, produced c. 1500 CE. From the Mamluk Sultanate or Ottoman Empire. Collection of the Hermitage Amsterdam.
Mamluk Sultanate, 1317 CE
Image by Ro4444

Mamluk Sultanate, 1317 CE

A map indicating the territory of the Mamluk Sultanate based in Cairo, 1317 CE.
Mamluk Chanfron
Image by Marie-Lan Nguyen

Mamluk Chanfron

A Mamluk chanfron, designed to protect the face and head of a warhorse. Hammered iron and gold decorations. Made in Egypt or Syria, c. 1419 CE. Collection of the Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon.
Mamluk, Frankish and Mongol Movement in 1271-2 CE
Image by PHGCOM

Mamluk, Frankish and Mongol Movement in 1271-2 CE

The Mamluks under Baibars (yellow) fought off the Franks and the Mongols during the Ninth Crusade.
Map of the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt c. 1330
Image by Simeon Netchev

Map of the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt c. 1330 - Slave Soldiers Who Ruled an Empire

The Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt (1250–1517) emerged from the military elite of the late Ayyubid state and transformed a palace coup into one of the most durable powers of the late medieval Islamic world. Following the death of al-Ṣāliḥ Ayyūb...
Map of the Rise of the Delhi Sultanate: The Mamluk Period
Image by Simeon Netchev

Map of the Rise of the Delhi Sultanate: The Mamluk Period - From Slave Commanders to Sultans

The Delhi Sultanate under the Mamluk (or “Slave”) Dynasty (1206–1290) marked the consolidation of centralized Muslim rule in northern India following the fragmentation of the Ghurid Empire. The term mamlūk (Arabic: “owned” or military slave...
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