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According to Fred M. Donner, the title's adoption marked a step in the centralization of the nascent Muslim state, as the ʾAmīr al-Muʾminīn was acknowledged as the central authority of the expanding Muslim empire, responsible for appointing and dismissing generals and governors, taking major political decisions, and keeping the dīwān ...
Amir Jangoo (born 1997), Trinidad and Tobago and West Indies cricket player; Amir Johnson (born 1987), American basketball player; Amir Mahdi Jule (born 1980), Iranian screenwriter and actor; Amir Karara (born 1977), Egyptian actor; Amir Karić (born 1973), Bosnian-Slovenian footballer; Amir Reza Khadem (born 1970), Iranian wrestler
Eren Bali (born 1984), Turkish engineer and technology entrepreneur Eren Erdem (born 1986), Turkish politician Eren Eyüboğlu (1913–1988), Romanian-born Turkish artist
Eren reveals his plan was much bigger than Armin thought. He purposely became an object of hate, triggered the Rumbling, and awaited his friends to come and put an end to him.
The Amir Hamza Ki Dastan, with its assimilation of a highly Islamic content into a self-consciously Sanskritized form, offers a fascinating early glimpse of the development of Hindi. The heirs of Nawal Kishore apparently published a 662-page Hindi version of the dastan as late as 1939.
Amir Saif ud-Din Mahmud was a Sunni Muslim. He grew up in Kesh , a small town near Samarkand in what is now Uzbekistan . When he was a young man, the region was destroyed and ravaged by Genghis Khan 's invasion of Central Asia , and much of the population fled to other lands, India being a favored destination.
In the Turkish Islamic lands, saints have been referred to by many terms, including the Arabic walī, the Persian s̲h̲āh and pīr, and Turkish alternatives like baba in Anatolia, ata in Central Asia (both meaning "father"), and eren or ermis̲h̲ (< ermek "to reach, attain") or yati̊r ("one who settles down") in Anatolia. [1]
Emir Sultan's lineage goes back to Hussein, the grandson of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. He was called "Muhammed Bukhari" because he was born in Bukhara, "Emir Bukhari" because he was a Sayyid, and "Emir Sultan" because he was dear to people's hearts - sultan of hearts - and after he became the son-in-law of Sultan Bayezid I. [2] [3]