Amir al-umara

The office of amir al-umara (Arabic: أمير الأمراء, romanizedamīr al-umarāʾ), variously rendered in English as emir of emirs,[1] prince of princes,[2] chief emir,[3] and commander of commanders,[4] was a senior military position in the 10th-century Abbasid Caliphate, whose holders in the decade after 936 came to supersede the civilian bureaucracy under the vizier and become effective regents, relegating the Abbasid caliphs to a purely ceremonial role. The office then formed the basis for the Buyid control over the Abbasid caliphs and over Iraq until the mid-11th century.

The title continued in use by Muslim states in the Middle East, but was mostly restricted to senior military leaders. It was also used in Norman Sicily for a few of the king's chief ministers.

  1. ^ Watt 1998, p. 100.
  2. ^ Catafago, Joseph (1858). An English and Arabic Dictionary, In Two Parts, Arabic and English, and English and Arabic. Bernard Quaritch, Oriental and Philological Bookseller. London. p. 30.
  3. ^ Zetterstéen 1960, p. 446.
  4. ^ Kennedy 2004, p. 195.