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Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani (Persian: میر سید علی همدانی; c. 1312–1385 CE) was a Sufi sunni Muslim saint of the Kubrawiya order, who played an important role in spread of Islam in the Kashmir Valley of northern India. He was born in Hamadan, Iran and preached Islam in Central Asia and South Asia.
The Kubrawiya order (Arabic: سلسلة کبرویة) or Kubrawi order, [1] also known as Kubrawi Hamadani,or Hamadani Kubra, [citation needed] is a Sufi order that traces its spiritual lineage to the Islamic prophet, Muhammad, through Ali, Muhammad's cousin, son-in-law and the First Imam. This is in similar to most other Sufi orders that trace ...
Nurbakhsh became a disciple of Sayyid Ishaq al-Khatlani, himself a disciple of Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani. [3] Through his writings Nurbakhsh made an attempt to bridge the gap between the orthodox Sunni 'ism and Shi'ism and gave an Islamic Fiqh of religious moderation in his book titled Al-Fiqh al-Ahwat (Moderate Islamic Jurisprudence).
The mosque was commissioned by Sultan Sikandar Butshikan in 1395 CE in memory of the Islamic preacher Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani.In recent centuries, some have claimed it was built on top of the ruins of a Hindu Kali temple, [3] although such claims have been thoroughly investigated and refuted. [4]
Khan Jahan Ali (d. 1459) Lal Shahbaz Qalander (1177–1274) [22] Machiliwale Shah; Magtymguly Pyragy; Noor Muhammad Maharvi (1730–1791) Mahmoodullah Shah; Mahmud Hudayi; Madurai Maqbara; Mir Amjad Ibrahim Ash Shadhili; Meher Ali Shah; Mian Mir (1550–1635) [23] Mian Muhammad Bakhsh; Sayyid Ali Hamadani; Muhammad Suleman Taunsvi; Mohammad Tartusi
Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani, میر سید علی ابن شہاب الدین ہمدانی - Islamic preacher traveller and poet (1314–1384) Padishah Khatun پادشاه خاتون; Kamal Khujandi, poet, Sufism (1321–1401) Shahin Shirazi; Junayd Shirazi; Qasem-e Anvar; Saif Farghani (d. 1348) Imadaddin Nasimi
Between 1950 and 2004 it was called Moskovskiy town, [2] then renamed in honor of Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani, a 14th-century Persia Great Islamic preacher, traveller, poet, and scholar who preached Islam in different parts of world, and is buried in Khatlon. The district capital is Moskovskiy or Moskva (Tajik: Маскав). [3]
The other lineage, known as Mirwaiz Hamadani (after Ali Hamadani), is based at the historic Khanqah-e-Moula mosque. Each lineage is traditionally the preserve of a single family that traces its roots to an ancestor who arrived in Kashmir with Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani in the 14th century.