Background
Like his father al-Musta�li (1094�1101), al-Amir was controlled by the regent al-Afdal Shahanshah (1094�1121) and had little influence in political matters.
Like his father al-Musta�li (1094�1101), al-Amir was controlled by the regent al-Afdal Shahanshah (1094�1121) and had little influence in political matters.
However, after the overthrow of al-Afdal in 1121 AD he managed to gain control of government. This conflict climaxed in the assassination of al-Amir on Tuesday, 3rd Zu-l-qada, 524 AH / 7 October 1130 AD. As per chronicle of Ibn al-Muyassar(d677): "In Rabi al-awwal(of524 AH)..Qasim al-Tayyib, was born to al-Amir;...Cairo was decorated. .New suits of clothes were issued to the troops...at the 'aqiqa ceremony... in presence of al-Amir...child was brought in, and Chief Qadi Ibn al- Muyassar was given the honour of holding it...the palace was filled with fruits and other sweets..."
This arrangement did not last much, Ali (bin(s/o) Afzal) (Kutayfat) expressed his enmity to Abd-al-Majedd & other Imam follower (Aimmat Tahereen) and aimed to take over Egypt.
He imprisoned Abd-ul-Majeed and began his subterfuge assisted by Al-Hasan (bin(s/o) Abdul Majeed). Imam follower were killed, their possessions were seized, Ibne Madyan and four figureheads of D'awa, namely. Naslaan, al-Azizi, Raslaan and Qunis were slain.
It is said that the guardian of Tayyib was Ibn Madyan, who have hidden him in a mosque. The infant son of al-Amir was supposed to carry in a basket of reeds by Abu Turab in which were vegetables (�dishes of cooked leeks and onions and carrots�), and the baby wrapped in �swaddling clothes was on the bottom with the food above him, and he brought him to the cemetery and the wet nurse suckled him in this mosque, and he concealed the matter from al-Hafiz until the baby grew up and began to be called Kufayfa, �little basket.��There was unrest amongst al-Amir follower. Emir Yanis 'organized resistance, and found a great response, especially among the soldiers of the Kutami 'the hereditary mainstay of Fatimid rule'.
On 16 Muharram, 526 AH, Ali s/o Afzal was 'killed while riding outside the city' and 'Abd al-Majid(Al-Hafiz) 'fetched from his prison' and 'restored as regent(Wali) of Imam Tayyib'. The event was commemorated annually, right to the end of the Fatimid dynasty, named as 'Eid al-Nasr' held on that date. This is expressly stated by al-Maqrizi(cf al-Maqrizi, Khitat, I, 357, 490), and is confirmed by a 'coin struck in Alexandria in 526, bearing the old legend: 'Abd al-Majid wali-ul-ahd (representative) al-muslimyn'.
Later Al-Hafiz claimed Imamat himself. The Taiyabi claimed that Taiyab abi al-Qasim, the two-year-old son (in 526 AH) of al-Amir was the rightful successor.
His reign was marred by the loss of Tyre to the Crusaders, as well as by the continuation of the schism between the Nizari and the Mustaali.