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Nasr Hamid Abu Zayd was born in Quhafa, a small village some 120 km from Cairo, near Tanta, Egypt on July 10, 1943. Abu Zayd went through a traditional religious school system [6] and was a Qāriʾ who could recite the Qur'an with the proper rules of recitation, and a Hafiz one who has memorized the Quran completely from a young age.
Abu Nasr Sa'd ibn Ali ibn Yusuf (Arabic: أبو نصر سعد بن علي بن يوسف, romanized: ʾAbū Naṣr Saʿd ibn ʿAlī ibn Yūsuf), known by the regnal name al-Musta'in bi-llah (Arabic: المستعين بالله, romanized: al-Mustaʿīn bi-ʾllāh, lit.
Abū Nasr Muhammad ibn al-Nāsir (Arabic: أبو نصر محمد بن الناصر; 1175 – 11 July 1226), better known with his regnal name al-Ẓāhir bi-Amr Allāh (الظاهر بأمر الله, lit. ' He Who Appears Openly by the Order of God '), was the Abbasid caliph in Baghdad from 1225 to 1226.
During the subsequent audience, the Caliph had Abu Muslim executed. [4] Following the murder of Abu Muslim, Malik was briefly arrested, but reconciled himself with the Abbasids and regained the Caliph's favour when he came to al-Mansur's aid during the Rawandiya uprising in 758/9. [5]
Khandaker Abu Nasr Muhammad Abdullah Jahangir (Arabic: أبو نصر محمد عبد الله جهانغير بن خوندكار أنور الزمان, Bengali: খোন্দকার আবু নসর মুহাম্মদ আব্দুল্লাহ জাহাঙ্গীর; 1 February 1961 – 11 May 2016), [2] or simply known as Abdullah Jahangir, [3] was a Bangladeshi Islamic ...
The Tarikh i Yamini, or Kitab i Yamini, written in Arabic [1] in an embellished, flowery rhetorical rhymed prose, [2] is a history of the reigns of Sebuktigin and Mahmud. Written by the historian Abu Nasr Muhammad ibn Muhammad al Jabbaru-l 'Utbi (or al-Utbi).
Fakhr-un-Nisa Shuhdah was born in early 11th century in the Iranian city of Dinawar to Abu Nasr Ahmad ibn al-Faraj al-Dinawari (d.574). [2] [3] Her great-grandfather had been a dealer in needles, and thus acquired the soubriquet al-Ibri'. But was her father who had acquired a passion for hadith, and managed to study it with several masters of ...
The author, Taj al-Din Abu Nasr Abd al-Wahhab al-Subki, was born in Cairo, according to Ibn Ayyub, al-Ghazzi, and Ibn Shuhba; however, Ibn Ayyub, al-Suyuti, and al-Misri, the Egyptian, and Ibn Hajar use the indefinite term, and Ibn Hajar omits the place of birth entirely.