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Muhammad ibn Abd Al-Haqq (died 1244), son of Abd al-Haqq I; Abu Yahya ibn Abd al-Haqq (died 1258), son of Abd al-Haqq I; Abu Yusuf Yaqub ibn Abd Al-Haqq (died 1286), son of Abd al-Haqq I; Abdul Haque (1918–1997), Bangladeshi author; Abdul Hoque (1930–1971), Bangladeshi politician; Abu Mohammed Abd el-Hakh Ibn Sabin (1217–1269), Spanish ...
The Life of Muhammad: A Translation of Ibn Ishaq's Sirat Rasul Allah. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-636033-1. Wessels, Antonie (1972). A modern Arabic biography of Muḥammad: a critical study of Muḥammad Ḥusayn Haykal's Ḥayāt Muḥammad. Brill Archive. ISBN 978-90-04-03415-0. Haykal, Muhammad Husayn (1976). The Life of Muhammad.
Uthman ibn Affan: Ruqayyah bint Muhammad: Fatimah Zahra: Muhammad ibn al-Hanafiyyah: Al-Mukhtar al-Thaqafi (Kaysān’îyyah) ʿAli bin ʿAbd Allāh: Ummayads: Uthman ibn Abu-al-Aas: Hasan al-mujtaba: Umm Ishaq bint Talha: Hussein ibn Ali : Shahrbanu: Abu Hāshim al-Hānafiyyah (Kaysān’īyyah) Muhammad "al-Imām" Yazid I: Zayd ibn al-Hasan ...
Abd al-Haqq II was made sultan in 1420 under the regency of a Wattasid vizier, and later was nominal sultan under Wattasid control until 1465. [1]Abd al-Haqq was the son of Sultan Abu Said Uthman III, who made an unsuccessful attempt to recover Ceuta from the Portuguese in 1419.
Hind bint Atiq. She married her paternal cousin, Sayfi ibn Umayya, and they had one son, Muhammad ibn Sayfi. [58] [59] Zaynab bint Abi Hala, who probably died in infancy. [60] The adopted daughters attributed to Muhammad, by Shia sources, are: Zaynab (599–629). She married her maternal cousin Abu al-Aas ibn al-Rabee before al-Hijra. [19]
Abd al-Malik also married A'isha bint Musa, a granddaughter of one of Muhammad's leading companions, Talha ibn Ubayd Allah, and together they had a son, Bakkar, who was also known as Abu Bakr. [ 160 ] [ 165 ] Abd al-Malik married and divorced during his caliphate Umm Abiha, a granddaughter of Ja'far ibn Abi Talib , [ 160 ] [ 166 ] [ 167 ] and ...
Muhammad was a son of the Umayyad caliph Abd al-Malik and one of his slave women (). [1] According to the historian Shiv Rai Chowdhry, Muhammad and his brother al-Hajjaj were named by Abd al-Malik because their names "were the most dear" to the caliph's staunchly loyal governor of Iraq al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf (d. 714). [2]
Abu Yusuf Yaqub ibn Abd al-Haqq (Arabic: أَبُو يُوسُف يَعقُوب بن عَبد الحَقّ) (c. 1212 – 20 March 1286) was a Marinid ruler of Morocco. He was the fourth son of Marinid founder Abd al-Haqq , and succeeded his brother Abu Yahya in 1258.