https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shapur_II's_Arab_campaign
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sasanian_Empire
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buyid_dynasty
In December 945 Aḥmad occupied the ʿAbbāsid capital of Baghdad as
amīr al-umarāʾ (commander in chief) and, reducing the
Sunnī Abbasid caliphs to puppet status, established Būyid rule.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qarmatians
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Sa'id_al-Jannabi#Early_life
Abu Sa'id al-Jannabi was of
Persian origin, from
Jannaba in coastal
Fars. He was born sometime between 845 and 855, and was reportedly crippled on his left side. He later claimed (or it was claimed by his followers) that he had royal descent from the
Sasanian dynasty, but in his early life he was a
furrier or flour merchant, initially in his native Jannaba, and later in the vicinity of
Kufa, where he moved
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Tahir_al-Jannabi
Abu Tahir Sulayman al-Jannabi (
Arabic: ابو طاهر سلیمان الجنّابي,
romanized:
Abū Tāhir Sulaymān al-Jannābī; 906–944) was the ruler of the
Qarmatian state in
Bahrayn (Eastern Arabia), who in 930 led the sacking of
Mecca.
A younger son of
Abu Sa'id al-Jannabi, the founder of the Qarmatian state, Abu Tahir became leader of the state in 923, after ousting his older brother
Abu'l-Qasim Sa'id. He immediately began an expansionist phase, raiding
Basra that year. He raided
Kufa in 927, defeating an
Abbasid army in the process, and threatened the Abbasid capital
Baghdad in 928 before pillaging much of
Iraq when he could not gain entry to the city.
In 930, he led the Qarmatians' most notorious attack when he pillaged
Mecca and desecrated Islam's most sacred sites. Unable to gain entry to the city initially, Abu Tahir called upon the right of all Muslims to enter the city and gave his oath that he came in peace. Once inside the city walls the Qarmatian army set about massacring the pilgrims, taunting them with verses of the
Koran as they did so. The bodies of the pilgrims were left to rot in the streets or thrown down the
Well of Zamzam. The
Kaaba was looted, with Abū Tāhir taking personal possession of the
Black Stone and bringing it back to
al-Hasa.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Baghdad_(1258)
(End/fall of Abbasid caliphate)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nasir_al-Din_al-Tusi
It was Ṭusi’s appropriation of these
waqfs that earned him the ire of Sunni Arab chroniclers such as Ebn Aybak Ṣafadi (1296-1363) as much as his involvement in the events in Baghdad.
Ṭusi’s role in the fall of Baghdad is fully recorded by Rašid-al-Din Fażl-Allāh (pp. 1007-9), Ḥamd-Allāh Mostawfi (pp. 94-96), Ḵˇāndamir (II, pp. 338-41, tr. pp. 59-60), and even Maḥmud Aqsarāʾi (p. 49), as well as most other Persian chroniclers: “Hülegü Khan commanded him to construct the observatory here in this country, for he had become aware of the goodness of his character and the sincerity of his heart and wished him to be in attendance on him”
Jews shoot arab pregnant women with snipers. Is this so called semitism as strong as this arab world thing? the jewish defenition of anti-semitism considers arab as anti-semites.. else they would not attack and defeat arabs in 3 wars.