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Al-Fath (Arabic: الفتح, al-fatḥ; meaning: "The Victory") is the 48th chapter of the Qur'an with 29 verses . The surah was revealed in Madinah in the sixth year of the Hijrah, on the occasion of the Treaty of Hudaybiya between the Muslim city-state of Madinah and Makkan polytheists. It mentions this victory, then criticizes the attitudes ...
Al-Fath was the son of Khaqan ibn Urtuj, a Turkic leader related to the ruling family of Ferghana. [1] Coming from his homeland in Central Asia to serve in the caliphal army, Urtuj had risen to become one of the main commanders—alongside Ashinas, Wasif al-Turki, and al-Afshin—of the Turkish guard established by Caliph al-Mu'tasim (r.
Ibn Khāqān was born in either Alcalá la Real or Seville. [2] He received an elite education and travelled widely across al-Andalus. Described as a 'libertine' and yet he was appointed secretary to the Almoravid governor of Granada Abū Yūsuf Tāshfīn ibn ‘Alī; a post he abandoned almost immediately to travel to Marrakesh where sometime later he was murdered, it was rumoured, on the ...
Umm al-Fath (II) was given a biography in Junnat al- rida ϔi l-taslim li-ma qaddara Allah wa-qad a, by the vizier Ibn ‘Asim from circa 1450. It was a propaganda work on the reign of Muhammad IX, in which Umm al-Fath and her virtues were praised, and her spouse was described as honoring her memory, meaning she would have been dead by before then.
al-Fath ibn Khaqan (al-Andalus) (died 1134), Andalusian writer; Fatḥ al-Din Ibn Sayyid al-Nās (1272–1334), Egyptian theologian; Fath al-Qal'i, ruler of Aleppo in 1016; Fath-Ali Khan Afshar (fl. 1747-1748), Afsharid chieftain in northern Iran; Fath-Ali Khan Daghestani (fl. 1716-20), Lezgian nobleman who served as vizier to the Safavid king ...
At the time Sebuktigin conquered the city, Abu Al-Fath was appointed to serve him at his court as an official writer. He maintained this position under his successor Mahmud. That was the period when most of his official records of the Ghaznavid conquests were made, known as "Kutub al Futuh" (Books of victories), of which only fragments survived.
Abu al-Fatḥ Manuchihr Khan (died 1636), was a Safavid official and gholam of Armenian origin. Like his father Qarachaqay Khan , Manuchihr was established at Mashhad as the general and governor of Khorasan under the shahs (kings) Abbas I (r. 1588–1629) and Ṣāfi (r. 1629–1642).
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