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Sultan Ali ibn al-Hassan Shirazi (Arabic: علي بن الحسن شيرازي) (c.10th century), was the founder of the Kilwa Sultanate. According to legend, Ali ibn al-Hassan Shirazi was one of seven sons of the Emir Al-Hassan of Shiraz, Persia, his mother an Abyssinian slave. Upon his father's death, Ali was driven out of his inheritance by ...
He was the son of Bashat ibn al-Hassan, the brother of sultan Ali ibn al-Hassan; Bashat had been appointed by his brother as the first ruler of Mafia Island. Bashat's son Ali ruled Kilwa for four and a half years. (c. 1001) [15] Dawud ibn Ali (son of previous) – deposed after four years by Matata Mandalima, king of the Changa/Xanga. [16]
Abu Hasan Ali al-Uraidhi ibn Ja'far al-Sadiq ... Saudi Arabia: Saudi Arabia: Saudi Arabia: Biography - 10 - Rad - al-Hassan bin Mahboob al-Rad (or al‑Sarrad or al ...
Manuscript of Ali ibn al-Hasan Zayn al-Din 'Attar Ansari Shirazi's Ikhtiyarat Badi'i. Copy created in Timurid Iran, dated 29 July 1444. Haji Zayn Attar [a] (c. 1329–1403) was a 14th-century Persian physician. He is best known as the author of the Persian language pharmacopoeia Ekhtiyarat i Badi i.
Abū 'Ali al-Ḥasan ibn Ahmad ibn al-Ghaffār al-Fārisī, was known as Abū Alī, or sometimes al-Fasawī. He was born in the town of Fasa in Fars province in 901. [5] He was born to a Persian father and an Arab mother. [5] [6] In 919, he went to Baghdād to study.
Following the arrival of Ibn al-Qushayri (son of al-Qushayri) in 469/1076 to teach at Nizamiyya madrassa, there had been a series of religious riots in Baghdad in 469–70/1076–77 between Hanbalis and Shafi'is. Ibn al-Qushayri denigrated the Hanbalis when he was there, accusing them of anthropromorphism in their discourse with Allah.
Grand Ayatollah Mujaddid Mirza Abu Muhammad Mu'iz al-Din Muhammad Hassan Husayni Shirazi (Persian: ابومحمد معزالدین محمدحسن حسينى شيرازی; Arabic: أبو محمد معز الدين محمد حسن الحسيني الشيرازي; 25 April 1815 – 20 February 1895), better simply known as Mirza Shirazi (میرزای شیرازی), was an Iranian Shia marja'.
He was the son of al-Husayn, the ma'dhun (senior deputy) to his predecessor, the ninth Da'i, also named Ali ibn al-Husayn, and grandson of the sixth Da'i, Ali ibn Hanzala. [1] Ali and his grandfather belonged to the Banu Hamdan and were the only ones to break the monopoly of the Qurayshi Ibn al-Walid family on the office of Da'i al-Mutlaq ...