When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Islamic taxes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_taxes

    Islamic taxes are taxes sanctioned by Islamic law. [1] They are based on both "the legal status of taxable land" and on "the communal or religious status of the taxpayer". [1] Islamic taxes include zakat - one of the five pillars of Islam. Only imposed on Muslims, it is generally described as a 2.5% tax on savings for charity.

  3. Khums - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khums

    Khums is the first Islamic tax, which was imposed in 2 AH/624 CE, [a] after the Battle of Badr. [3] It is separate from other Islamic taxes [ b ] such as zakat and jizya . [ 5 ] [ 6 ] It is treated differently in Sunni and Shia Islam ; key topics of debate include the types of wealth subject to khums, the methods of its collection and ...

  4. Urdu Daira Maarif Islamiya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urdu_Daira_Maarif_Islamiya

    Urdu Daira Maarif Islamiya or Urdu Encyclopaedia of Islam (Urdu: اردو دائرہ معارف اسلامیہ) is the largest Islamic encyclopedia published in Urdu by University of the Punjab. Originally it is a translated, expanded and revised version of Encyclopedia of Islam. Its composition began in the 1950s at University of the Punjab.

  5. Bahar-e-Shariat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahar-e-Shariat

    Bahar-e-Shariat (Urdu: بہارِ شریعت; 1939) is an encyclopedia of Islamic fiqh (jurisprudence), according to the Hanafi school. Spreading over 20 volumes, Seventeen of its volumes were written by Amjad Ali Aazmi , a disciple of Ahmed Raza Khan .

  6. Islam and Modernism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_and_Modernism

    Islam and Modernism (Urdu: اسلام اور جدت پسندی) is a book originally written in Urdu by Pakistani scholar Taqi Usmani on Islam and modernity. The original title is "Islam aur Jiddat Pasandi". Two years later it was translated into English with the title Islam and Modernism. It was first published in 1990. [1]

  7. Islamic economics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_economics

    A supporter of Islamic economics describes a "major difficulty" faced by Islamic reformers of Islamic economics and pointed out by other authors, namely that because a financial system is an "integrated and coherent structure", to create an Islamic system "based on trust, community and no interest" requires "changes and interventions on several ...

  8. Kharaj - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kharaj

    The reforms of Umar II were finalized under the Abbasids and would thereafter form the model of tax systems in the Islamic state. [3] From that time on, kharaj was also used as a general term describing all kinds of taxes: for example, the classic treatise on taxation by the 9th century jurist Abu Yusuf was called Kitab al-Kharaj , i.e.

  9. Jizya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jizya

    After the Norman conquest of Sicily, taxes imposed on the Muslim minority were also called the jizya (locally spelled gisia). [215] This poll tax was a continuation of the jizya imposed on non-Muslims in the Emirate of Sicily and Bari by Islamic rulers of southern Italy, before the Norman conquest. [215]