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Notable examples of Christian individuals named Habib include Habib the Deacon, [4] Gabriel Habib [5] ... Habib ibn Maslama al-Fihri, 7th-century Arab general;
Habib ibn Muhammad al-‘Ajami al-Basri (Arabic: حبيب بن محمد العجمي البصري) known also as Habib al-Ajami (حبيب العجمي) and Habib al-Farsi (حبيب الفارسي) was a Muslim Sufi mystic, saint, and traditionalist of Persian descent. Different dates for his death are given in the sources, such as 113 AH (731 ...
A court scene from a manuscript of the Habib al-Siyar.Copy made in Safavid Iran, dated 1625. The Ḥabīb al-siyar fī akhbār afrād al-bashar (Persian: حبیب السیر فی اخبار افراد البشر; "The beloved of careers reporting on the multitudes of people") is a universal history by the Persian historian Khvandamir (died 1535/6).
Although various research scholars have made Habib al-Rahman the title of their thesis, one thesis of M.Phil. standard has been written about him. Masood Ahmad Azmi wrote ‘‘Hayat abul Ma'asir Allama Habib al-Rahman al-Azmi (حیات ابو المآثر علامہ حبیب الرحمن الاعظمی)’’ in two volumes.
Jami Sahih is, along with Tartib al-Musnad, the most important hadith collection for Ibadis. It was compiled by Al-Rabi' bin Habib Al-Farahidi and later on organized and arranged by Yusuf Ibrahim al-Warjilani (يوسف إبراهيم الوارجلاني). [ 1 ]
Habib Bacha El-Saad (Arabic: حبيب باشا السعد; 1867 – 5 May 1942) was a Lebanese Maronite politician who was born in Ain Traz, Aley District. He served as the Speaker of the Parliament of Lebanon from May 1922 to October 1923. [ 1 ]
While it is generally agreed that the name of Khvandamir's Habib al-siyar referred to his new patron Habiballah Savaji, it may have in fact referred to Shah Ismail, as the latter is often called habib-i ilahi (friend of God) in the work. In 1524, Khvandamir finished his first version (called A) of the book, and the following year a second ...
Ibn al-Nadīm wrote that "his wisdom was close to the wisdom of Islam", because he defended the "oneness of hypostasis" against the doctrine of the Jacobites and Melkites. [2] One apologetic treatise by Ibn Bahrīz is known, entitled Maqāla fī l-tawḥīd wa-l-tathlīth ('Treatise on the Unity and Trinity').