Category
page 1Assassinated viziers

Talaat Paşa
Turkish Ottoman politician (1874–1921)
Nizam al-Mulk
Persian Seljuk scholar, politician, vizier and court official (1018–1092)
Al-Afdal Shahanshah
vizier of the Fatimid Caliphate from 1094 to 1121
Tala'i ibn Ruzzik
Vizier of the Fatimid Caliphate
Barjawan
'''Abū'l-Futūh Barjawān al-Ustādh' (عَبْدُ الْفُتُوحِ بَرْجَوَانِ الْأُسْتَاذِ; died 25/26 March 1000) was a eunuch palace official who became the prime minister (wāsiṭa) and de facto'' regent of the Shia Fatimid Caliphate in October 997, and held the position until his assassination. Of obscure origin, Barjawan became the tutor of heir-apparent al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, who became caliph in 996 with the death of al-Aziz Billah. On al-Hakim's coronation, power was seized by the Kutama Berbers, who tried to monopolize government and clashed with their rivals, the Turkic slave-soldiers. Allied with
Abbas Hassan Jumaah
Senior Abbasid official and vizier from 904 to 908
Al-'Adil ibn al-Sallar
12th-century Fatimid military commander
Al-Àfdal Kutayfat
Kutayfāt, also known as Abu Ali Ahmad ibn al-Afdal or al-Afdal Kutayfāt, (d. 1131) was vizier and amīr al-juyūsh (commander of the armies) to al-Hafiz, Caliph of Egypt, from 1130 to 1131. He seized power by imprisoning al-Hafiz, proclaimed the dynasty deposed and abandoned Isma'ilism as the state religion in favour of a vaguely Twelver form of Shi'ism with himself as vicegerent of a hidden imam. but was murdered by Fatimid forces loyal to the caliph. Kutayfāt was the son of al-Afdal Shahanshah and grandson of Badr al-Jamali, and so the third generation of Armenians serving as Fatimid vizier.