Ali II | |
Shah of Shirvan | |
Reign: | 1034 – 1043 |
Issue: | Ali III |
Predecessor: | Manuchehr I |
Regent: | Mansur b. Musaddid |
Reg-Type: | Vizier |
Successor: | Kubad |
Queen: | Sitt (daughter of Fadl ibn Muhammad) |
Royal House: | House of Shirvanshah |
Father: | Yazid III |
Death Date: | 1043 |
Death Place: | Shamakhi |
Abu Mansur Ali was twelfth Shah of Shirvan, ruling from 1034 to 1043.
Abu Mansur murdered his elder brother Manuchihr I with aid of his wife and rose to throne, also marrying her in January 1035. He continued to push traditional claims of Shirvanian suzerainty over Emirate of Derbent throughout his reign.
Just a few months later, on 9 February 1035, Abd al-Malik ibn Mansur, emir of Derbent was ousted by local nobility who submitted to Ali. Ali in turn entrusted his vizier Mansur b. Musaddid to rule the town. However, these gains were lost just in April after Abd al-Malik invaded the town. In order to seal the peace with Shirvan, he aggreed to marry Ali's sister Shamkuya. The news of alliance raised disturbance in Derbent, whose nobility attacked Abd al-Malik's vizier Saqlab b. Muhammad's house and forced the emir to flee to Shirvan. Ali II in turn restored his brother-in-law to his throne. Both Ali and Abd al-Malik died in 1043, and Shirvanshah was succeeded by his younger brother Kubad.
His coins were found in Çuxur Qəbələ, 1976. The mint name Beylaqan honoring the name of Caliph Al-Qa'im suggests that Shirvanshah extended his domain to southwards. The legend on the coins also implied that Abu Mansur took the laqab of Imad al-Dawla or Amid al-Dawla.[1]