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Ibn al-Farid or Ibn Farid; (Arabic: عمر بن علي بن الفارض, `Umar ibn `Alī ibn al-Fārid) (22 March 1181 – 1234) was an Arab poet as well as a Sufi waliullah. His name is Arabic for "son of the obligator" (the one who divides the inheritance between the inheritors), as his father was well regarded for his work in the legal ...
Ibn al-Farid (c. 1181 – 1234), Arabic poet, writer, and philosopher Ibn Fadlan (10th century), writer, traveler, member of an embassy of the Caliph of Baghdad to the Volga Bulgars G
Abdallah ibn Alawi al-Haddad (1634–1720, buried in Hadhramaut, author on several books on Dhikr) Abdullah Ansari; Abdullah Shah Ghazi (d. 720, buried in Karachi) Abdul Khaliq Ghajadwani (d. 1179, buried in Bukhara, one of the Khwajagan of the Naqshbandi order) Abdul Qadir Gilani (1077–1166, buried in Baghdad, founder of the Qadiriyya Sufi ...
Ibn al-Faraḍī began his studies in religious sciences in his native city of Córdoba, [1] [2] and continued them in Toledo, Écija, and Medina-Sidonia. [1] Among his many of his well-known tutors were Ibn Awn Allāh (d. 988), Abū ‘Abd Allāh ibn Mufarrij (d. 990), ‘Abd Allāh ibn Qāsim al-Thagrī (d. 993), and Abū Zakariyya ibn Aidh (d. 985). [2]
Poem of the Sufi Way, or Nazm al-suluk, is an Arabic poem by the Sufi mystic and scholar, Shayk Umar ibn al-Farid.An exact date of the poem's writing is unknown as Umar ibn al-Farid (1181–1235 ad) is said to have written this text during the course of many years.
al-ʿIqd al-Farīd (The Unique Necklace, Arabic: العقد الفريد) is an anthology attempting to encompass 'all that a well-informed person had to know in order to pass in society as a cultured and refined individual' (or adab), [1] composed by Ibn ʿAbd Rabbih (860–940), an Arab writer and poet from Córdoba in Al-Andalus.
In 1247, Qunawi took his students (including Farghani) to Egypt, where he taught them the poem Nazm al-suluk ("Poem of the Sufi way"), also known as al-Taʾiyya al-kubra ("The greater ode with rhyming verse based upon the letter taʾ"), by the Egyptian Sufi poet Ibn al-Farid (died 1234). [2] Farghani died in August 1300 in the city of Damascus ...
Ibn Humaid (1908–1981) Ibn Jibrin (1933–2009) Ibrahim ibn Muhammad Al ash-Sheikh; Maher Al-Mu'aiqly (born 1969) Mohamad al-Arefe (born 1970) Muhammad ibn Alawi al-Maliki (1944–2004) Muhammad Al-Munajid (born 1960) Muhammad Ayyub (1952–2016) Muhammad bin Abdul Karim Issa (born 1965) Muhammad Muhsin Khan (1927–2021) Nasir al-Fahd (born ...