Location: east of the Muršidīyyā and the dār al-ḥadīṯ al-ʾAšrafīyyā (Nuʿaīmī).
ʿIbar, anno 600: al-Malik al-ʾAšraf, lord of Ḥarrān, married the sister of the lord of Mosul, the atābikīyyā princess, al-Ǧihā al-ʾAtābikīyyā.
ʿIbar, anno 640: In this year died the ʾAtābikīyyā princess, wife of al-Malik al-ʾAšraf Muẓaffar ad-Dīn Mūsā, foundress of the madrasā and turbā, Turkān (or Tarkān) H̱ātūn, a daughter of Sultan ʿīzz ad-Dīn Masʿūd bin Quṭb ad-Dīn Mawdūd bin Zengī bin Aqsunqur (aḏ-Ḏahabī).
Hence, she was a grandniece of Nūr ad-Dīn.
She died in Rabīʿ I 640 (September 1242) and was buried in the madrasā that she had built on the Qāsīyūn. The night of her death, her turbā and madrasā became waqf. (aṣ-Ṣafadī).
Ernst Herzfeld. Damascus, Studies in Architecture III. Ars Islamica XI-XII 1946 (p. 1-71).

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