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Malik Dinar (Arabic: مالك دينار, romanized: Mālik b. Dīnār , Malayalam : മാലിക് ദീനാര്) (died 748 CE) [ 2 ] was a Muslim scholar and traveller. He was one of the first known Muslims to have come to India in order to teach Islam in the Indian Subcontinent after the departure of King Cheraman Perumal .
Many of the Ghuzz were killed and Malik Dinar was forced to take refuge in the city's citadel. Malik Dinar eventually decided that prolonged resistance was impossible and offered to hand over Sarakhs to a representative of the amir of Nishapur, Toghan-Shah. The latter sent his amir Qaraqush with an army; when it arrived before Sarakhs Malik ...
The word dinar comes from the Latin word denarius, which was a silver coin. The name "dinar" is also used for Sasanid, Kushan, and Kidarite gold coins, though it is not known what the contemporary name was. The first dinars were issued by the Umayyad Caliphate. Under the dynasties that followed the use of the dinar spread from Islamic Spain to ...
Malik Dinar was a native Indian slave who served as general in Khalji dynasty of Delhi Sultanate. He served as subordinate officer Malik Kafur and was also a Shihna-yi pil or intendant of elephantry [ 1 ] and was sent by Kafur to suppress rebellion in Gujarat.
Malik ibn al-Nadr (Arabic: مَالِك ٱبْن ٱلنَّضْر, romanized: mālik ibn annaḍr) was an ancestor of the Islamic prophet Muḥammad. He was the son of al-Nadr . [ 1 ]
Malik was born as the son of Anas ibn Malik (not the Sahabi with the same name) and Aaliyah bint Shurayk al-Azdiyya in Medina, c. 711. His family was originally from the al-Asbahi tribe of Yemen , but his great grandfather Abu 'Amir relocated the family to Medina after converting to Islam in the second year of the Hijri calendar , or 623 CE.
Malik Dinar was a native Indian slave who served as general in Khalji dynasty of Delhi Sultanate. He served as subordinate officer Malik Kafur and was also a Shihna-yi pil or intendant of elephantry [ 1 ] and was sent by Kafur to suppress rebellion in Gujarat.
Muhammad gave him a dinar to buy a sacrificial animal or a sheep. He bought two sheep, sold one of them for a dinar, and brought him a sheep and dinar. So he invoked a blessing on him in his business dealing, and he was such that if had he bought dust he would have made a profit from it.