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・ Malik Al Nasir
・ Malik al-Ashtar
・ Malik Al-Hassan Yakubu
・ Malik Alam's Mosque
・ Malik Allahyar Khan
・ Malik Allen
・ Malik Altunia
・ Malik Ambar
・ Malik Amin Aslam
・ Malik Anokha
・ Malik Asif Hayat
・ Malik Asselah
・ Malik Ata Muhammad Khan
・ Malik Ausean Evans
・ Malik Ayaz
Malik Ayyaz
・ Malik Azmani
・ Malik B.
・ Malik Balkha Khilji
・ Malik Barkat Ali
・ Malik Bendjelloul
・ Malik Bentalha
・ Malik Beyleroğlu
・ Malik Bouziane
・ Malik Buari
・ Malik caste
・ Malik clan (Bihar)
・ Malik clan (Gujarat)
・ Malik clan (Kashmir)
・ Malik clan (Punjab)


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Malik Ayyaz : ウィキペディア英語版
Malik Ayyaz

Malik Ayyaz, called Meliqueaz by the Portuguese was a naval officer and governor of the city of Diu, in the mouth of the Gulf of Khambhat (Cambay), circa 1507-1509 under the rule of Gujarat Sultanate. He was one of the most distinguished warriors of his time.〔"The book of Duarte Barbosa: an account of the countries bordering on the Indian Ocean and their inhabitants", p.130, Duarte Barbosa, Mansel Longworth Dames, Asian Educational Services, 1989, ISBN 81-206-0451-2〕
Meliqueaz was a mamluk of Dalmatian Christian origin, who had been imprisoned and converted to Islam. Taken to India he distinguished at the service of the Sultan Mahmud Begada of Gujarat (''Malik'' being the equivalent of Lord). At that time Gujarati were important middlemen in the trade with Red Sea, Egypt and Malacca, and when the Portuguese threatened this field, the Sultan put the defense in the hands of Meliqueaz.〔"A military history of modern Egypt: from the Ottoman Conquest to the Ramadan War", p.20, Andrew James McGregor, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2006, ISBN 0-275-98601-2〕 With the aim at expelling the Portuguese from the Arabian sea, the sultan allied with the zamorin of Khozikode and asked the Mamluk sultanate of Cairo for help.〔( Portuguese and the Sultanate of Gujarat, p. 30 ) Mittal Publications〕 With Ottoman support, the Mamluks prepared then a fleet in the Red Sea.
In March 1508, commanded by Mirocem (Amir Husain Al-Kurdi), the Mamluk fleet arrived at Chaul where they surprised a Portuguese fleet. Joined by Meliqueaz they fought and won the Battle of Chaul against Lourenço de Almeida, son of the Portuguese viceroy who died there, having taken several prisoners.
Enraged at the death of his son, the Portuguese viceroy Francisco de Almeida sought revenge. Aware of the danger facing his city, Meliqueaz prepared the defence and wrote to the viceroy, stating that he had the prisoners and how bravely his son had fought, adding a letter from the Portuguese prisoners stating that they were well treated.〔Michael Naylor Pearson, ("Merchants and rulers in Gujarat: the response to the Portuguese in the sixteenth century" ), p. 70 University of California Press, 1976
ISBN 0-520-02809-0〕 The viceroy then wrote to Meliqueaz, stating his intention of revenge and that they better join all forces and prepare to fight, or he would destroy Diu:

Put in a double bind, he faced the viceroy at the Battle of Diu (1509) which ended in victory for the Portuguese, with terrible losses on the Gujarat-Mamluk-Khozikode side, after which Meliqueaz handed over the prisoners of Chaul, dressed and well fed. To his surprise, Francisco de Almeida, who was ending his term as viceroy, refused his offer to allow a Portuguese fortress in Diu, an offer that the Portuguese soon sought ardently, and which he managed to stall for as long as he was governor of Diu. The fort would be built only in 1535-1536.
==Notes==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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