Mamluk historians see an impact Media propaganda in the success of the Abbasid organization

Document Type : Original Article

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Abstract

History is based mostly on stories that glorify the sultans or rulers in general, or glorify the party that has the political or military power. Hence, there are novels based on opinions that are not objective and biased, and such accounts are often interspersed with ideological or material motives. The Abbasids spread rumors among the general public made them more acceptable than the Umayyads, and thus facilitated the means of their revolution and success and then took control of the Caliphate, The Abbasid Caliphate in Baghdad, and what we want to highlight here by choosing this title is the vision of the Mamluk era historians about this propaganda and how to tell them about it, especially that they are distant from them in terms of time and space, and above all that they are neutral in the novel as the Umayyad state was Sunni Arab and the Abbasid state is The other is Sunni Arab, which means a national religious-religious congruence. Hence, the Mamluk narrative on this aspect should be completely independent and not biased.

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