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Al-Mansur Ali bin Salah ad-Din : ウィキペディア英語版
Al-Mansur Ali bin Salah ad-Din
Al-Mansur Ali bin Salah ad-Din (1373–1436) was an imam of the Zaidi state in Yemen who ruled in 1391-1436, partly in rivalry with other claimants to the imamate.
==Contest over the imamate==

Ali bin Salah ad-Din was a son of the preceding imam an-Nasir Muhammad Salah ad-Din who had held extensive power in highland Yemen. He grew up in San'a, the most important city of the realm. After an-Nasirs sudden demise in 1391, no less than four claimants to the imamate appeared, foremost among them the learned al-Mahdi Ahmad bin Yahya. The young Ali eventually prevailed. He was proclaimed imam under the name al-Mansur Ali, with the support of the scholars and population of San'a. However, a rival imam called al-Hadi Ali had some support in the northern parts of the Zaidi territory from 1393 to 1432. Due to the unrest, al-Mansur Ali had to travel frequently to trouble spots. He had to fight hard to gain control over Sa'dah, the traditional centre of Zaidi power in the north. Various strongholds of the Isma'ili sect were taken, and they were forced out of Dhu Marmar, a fortress to the east of San'a.〔Zaidi biographies, http://www.al-aalam.com/personinfo.asp?pid=638 (in Arabic).〕 In Zaidi historiography, the imam is celebrated as a ''mujaddid bi-sayfihi'', a warlike restorer. That his bellicose exploits sometimes afflicted other Zaidi Muslims did not detract from his reputation. Al-Mansur Ali's rule over San'a was never in danger, but in 1395 he sacked the qadi in the city, who had been found to correspond with the Rasulid Dynasty in the lowland. Two years later he made a diplomatic foray when he sent offerings to the Rasulid Sultan al-Ashraf Isma'il I in Zabid. The offerings consisted of "five loads of articles esteemed as rarities, and five head of horses of good lineages".〔El-Khazreji, ''The Pearl-Strings; A History of the Resuli dynasty'', Vol. II. Leiden 1908, pp. 258-9.〕

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