Abu'l-Abbas Ismail (Persian: ابوالقاسم عباس اسماعیل), was an Iranian statesman from the Mikalid family, who served the Abbasids, and later the Samanids. He was the son of Abd-Allah Mikali, a powerful magnate of the Saffarids, and later the governor of Ahvaz under the Abbasids. When Abu'l-Abbas became old enough, he also began serving the Abbasids and later became the patron of his tutor, the poet Ibn Duraid. Abu'l-Abbas later moved to Nishapur, in his homeland Khorasan, then under the control of the Iranian Samanids. In 958, he was appointed as the head of chancery by the vizier of the Samanid ruler Abd al-Malik I, . Abu'l-Abbas would keep this office until his death in 973. He had three sons; one named , who would obtain the offices of his father, another one named , and the last one name
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| - Abu'l-Abbas Ismail (Persian: ابوالقاسم عباس اسماعیل), was an Iranian statesman from the Mikalid family, who served the Abbasids, and later the Samanids. He was the son of Abd-Allah Mikali, a powerful magnate of the Saffarids, and later the governor of Ahvaz under the Abbasids. When Abu'l-Abbas became old enough, he also began serving the Abbasids and later became the patron of his tutor, the poet Ibn Duraid. Abu'l-Abbas later moved to Nishapur, in his homeland Khorasan, then under the control of the Iranian Samanids. In 958, he was appointed as the head of chancery by the vizier of the Samanid ruler Abd al-Malik I, . Abu'l-Abbas would keep this office until his death in 973. He had three sons; one named , who would obtain the offices of his father, another one named , and the last one name (en)
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| - Abu'l-Abbas Ismail (Persian: ابوالقاسم عباس اسماعیل), was an Iranian statesman from the Mikalid family, who served the Abbasids, and later the Samanids. He was the son of Abd-Allah Mikali, a powerful magnate of the Saffarids, and later the governor of Ahvaz under the Abbasids. When Abu'l-Abbas became old enough, he also began serving the Abbasids and later became the patron of his tutor, the poet Ibn Duraid. Abu'l-Abbas later moved to Nishapur, in his homeland Khorasan, then under the control of the Iranian Samanids. In 958, he was appointed as the head of chancery by the vizier of the Samanid ruler Abd al-Malik I, . Abu'l-Abbas would keep this office until his death in 973. He had three sons; one named , who would obtain the offices of his father, another one named , and the last one named , a military officer who fought with the Byzantines and the pagan Turks in their steppes. (en)
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