thumb|upright=1.25|A map showing the extent of the Amirid-affiliated Saqalabid alliance in 1018 (409 AH). The ʿĀmirids ( or Banū ʿĀmir ) were the descendants and Ṣaqlabī (Slavic) clients of the house of the ḥājib ʿĀmir Muḥammad al-Manṣūr, the de facto ruler of the Umayyad caliphate of Córdoba from 976 until 1002. A series of ʿĀmirid dictators were the powers behind the caliphal throne during the long reign of Hishām II. Four ʿĀmirid dynasties were established during the period of taifas (petty kingdoms) that followed the collapse of the caliphate: Valencia, Dénia, Almería and Tortosa.
thumb|upright=1.25|A map showing the extent of the Amirid-affiliated Saqalabid alliance in 1018 (409 AH). The ʿĀmirids ( or Banū ʿĀmir ) were the descendants and Ṣaqlabī (Slavic) clients of the house of the ḥājib ʿĀmir Muḥammad al-Manṣūr, the de facto ruler of the Umayyad caliphate of Córdoba from 976 until 1002. A series of ʿĀmirid dictators were the powers behind the caliphal throne during the long reign of Hishām II. Four ʿĀmirid dynasties were established during the period of taifas (petty kingdoms) that followed the collapse of the caliphate: Valencia, Dénia, Almería and Tortosa.
==Ḥājibs== The following list is derived from . Muḥammad ibn Abi ʿĀmir al-Manṣūr: 981–1002 ʿAbd al-Malik al-Muẓaffar, son of prec.: 1002–1008 ʿAbd al-Raḥmān Sanchuelo, brother of prec.: 1008–1009
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).