enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Blues for Allah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blues_for_Allah

    Blues for Allah is the eighth studio album (twelfth album overall) by the Grateful Dead. It was released on September 1, 1975, and was the band's third album released through their own Grateful Dead Records label. The album was recorded between February and May of 1975 during an extended hiatus from touring.

  3. Blue Quran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Quran

    Leaf from the Blue Quran showing Sura 30: 28–32, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.. The Blue Quran (Arabic: الْمُصْحَف الْأَزْرَق, romanized: al-Muṣḥaf al-′Azraq) is an early Quranic manuscript written in Kufic script. [1]

  4. Islamic manuscripts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_Manuscripts

    Traditionally speaking in the Islamic empire, Arabic calligraphy was the common form of recording texts. Calligraphy is the practice or art of decorative handwriting. [ 3 ] The demand for calligraphy in the early stages of the Islamic empire (circa 7–8th century CE) can be attributed to a need to produce Qur'an manuscripts.

  5. Al-Aḥad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Aḥad

    al-Aḥad or Aḥad (Arabic: الأحد) is one of the names of God (Arabic: Allah) according to Islam, meaning "The One". [1] This name means that God, in Islam, is the one who is singled out in all aspects of perfection and that nothing else shares perfectness with him. [1]

  6. Islamic honorifics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_honorifics

    Calligraphic Arabic text of the common kind of "Salawat": Arabic: «اللهم صل علی محمد و آل محمد», meaning "Blessings and peace be upon Muhammad and his family", in the handwriting of Shamsuddin Asaf Jahi A calligraphic composition by Hafiz Osman which used the honorific Islamic suffix phrase «صَلَّى ٱللَّٰهُ ...

  7. Al-Muṣawwir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Muṣawwir

    Al-Muṣawwir written in Arabic. Al-Muṣawwir or Muṣawwir (Arabic: المصور) is one of the names of God in Islam, meaning "The Shaper," "The Bestower of Forms," or "The Fashioner." [1] This appellation signifies that God is the Creator of all things, meticulously shaping and arranging everything in accordance with His wisdom.

  8. List of flags with Islamic symbolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_flags_with_Islamic...

    the center emblem is a stylized form of the Arabic word Allah and its five parts represent the Five Pillars of Islam; the red and green bands bear the Takbir [8] Flag of Iraq bears the Takbir [ 9 ]

  9. Huwa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huwa

    In Sufism Hu is the pronoun used for Allah or God. Allah Hu means "God, Just He!" In Arabic Allah means God and with Hu, as an intensive added to Allah, means "God himself." Hu is also found in a variant of the first part of the Islamic credo, wherein lā ilāha illā Allāh "there is no god but God," is shortened to lā ilāha illā Hu(wa) meaning "There is no God but He".