Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Tyre' has mentioned 'Dynasty' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
In the subsequent years it started benefitting from the protection by Egypt's Eighteenth Dynasty and prospered commercially.
According to Roman historian Justin, an insurrection of slaves took place during the Persian period, which spared only the life of one slave-master named Straton xe2x80x93 who was then selected by the former slaves to be the new king and established a dynasty.
Lucullus' successor Pompey had Antiochus assassinated and thus ended the Seleucid dynasty for good.
In the following decades, Ali al-Saghir xe2x80x93 a leader of the discriminated Metwali, the Shia Muslims of what is now Lebanon xe2x80x93 established a dynasty[93]
Around 1750, Jabal Amel's ruler from the Shiite dynasty of Ali al-Saghir (see above),[86] Sheikh Nasif al-Nassar, initiated a number of construction projects to attract new inhabitants to the almost deserted town.
Two years later, Shiite forces under Hamad al-Mahmud from the Ali al-Saghir dynasty (see above) rebelled against the occupation.
While the Al-As'ad descendants of the rural Ali al-Saghir dynasty expanded their fief holdings as the provincial leaders in Jabal Amel, another power player rose from the urban class of the mercantilist notables ("Wujaha' ") to the rank of Zu'ama (feudal landlords) in Tyre:[104]
The 1908 Young Turk Revolution and its call for elections to an Ottoman parliament triggered a power-struggle in Jabal Amel: on the one hand side Rida al-Sulh of a Sunni dynasty from Sidon, which had sidelined the Shia Al-As'ad clan of the Ali al-Saghir dynasty (see above) in the coastal region with support from leading Shiite families like the al-Khalil clan in Tyre.
His opponent was Kamil Al-As'ad from the Ali al-Saghir dynasty that still dominated the hinterland.
Also in 1915, Abdel Karim al-Khalil xe2x80x93 the leader of the al-Khalil clan, who were the Tyrian allies of the al-Sulh dynasty from Sidon xe2x80x93 was executed by the Ottoman regime "at the instigation" of Kamil al-As'ad from the rival Ali al-Saghir dynasty,[86] some believed.
After the Arab Revolt against the Ottoman rule started in 1916 and the Sharifian Army conquered the Levant in 1918 with support from the British Empire, the Jamal Amil feudal leader Kamil al-As'ad of the Ali al-Saghir dynasty, who had been an Ottomanist before, declared the area xe2x80x93 including Tyre xe2x80x93 part of the Arab Kingdom of Syria on 5 October 1918.
He had played a decisive role in the 1908 power struggle between the al-As'ad clan of the Ali al-Saghir dynasty on the one hand side and the al-Sulh dynasty with their Tyrian allies of the al-Khalil family (see above) in favour of the former.
Still in 1920, the first municipality of Tyre was founded, which was headed by Ismail Yehia Khalil[114] from the Shia feudal dynasty of al-Khalil.
The al-Khalil family had traditionally been allies of the al-Sulh clan, whereas Imam Sharafeddin supported the rival al-Asa'ad clan of the Ali al-Saghir dynasty since 1908 (see above).
In contrast, a school project by Sharafeddin's political rival Kazem al-Khalil failed despite support from prime minister Riad al-Sulh, to whose family the al-Khalil feudal dynasty was traditionally allied.
When President Camille Chamoun introduced a new electoral system in 1957, Ahmed al-Asaad from the feudal Ali al-Saghir dynasty, who at the beginning of the decade had even been the Speaker of the Lebanese parliament, for the first time lost the vote for deputy (MP).
During the 1958 crisis, Kazem al-Khalil was the only Shi'ite minister in the cabinet of Sami as-Sulh, to whose family the al-Khalil feudal dynasty was traditionally allied.
[86] Despite the victory of the al-As'ad dynasty who had played a dominant role in Tyre and Jabal Amel for almost three centuries, its power began to crumble at the same time with the arrival of a newcomer:
[146] Meanwhile, al-Khalil's rival Jafar Sharafeddin became more alienated from Sadr because of the Sharafeddin alliance with Kamil al-As'ad from the Ali al-Saghir dynasty, whereas Sadr opposed the zu'ama feudal landlords altogether.
There, Sadr's power struggle with the traditional feudal rulers escalated: thanks to the backing of the SISC Sadr managed to gradually break up the inherited power of Kamil al-As'ad xe2x80x93 a close ally of President Suleiman Frangieh[86] xe2x80x93 from the Ali al-Saghir dynasty after almost three centuries,[155] although al-As'ad's list still dominated the South in the parliamentary elections of 1972 and the by-elections of 1974.
In the 1992 elections, Kamil al-As'ad from the feudal dynasty of Ali al-Saghir headed a list that lost against Amal.
In 2006, another scion of Tyre's "neo-feudal" al-Khalil clan - Ali Hassan al-Khalil - joined Amal and thus won a parliamentary seat against Ahmed al-As'ad from the arch-rival Ali al-Saghir dynasty, though not in Tyre but in Marjayoun Hasbaiya.
The allied list of Hezbollah and Amal won all seven seats with a 92% landslide, while the one headed by Riad As'ad from the feudal dynasty of Ali al-Saghir only scored 8%.