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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 (Arabic: The Victory) was a weekly political magazine which existed between 1926 and 1948 in Cairo, Egypt.The magazine is known for its cofounder and editor Muhib Al Din Al Khatib and for its role in introducing Hasan Al Banna, founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, to the Egyptian political life.
Since June 6, 2017, the Prime Minister and the Ministry of Public Security have deployed officials to Tay Ninh to decide to include the Dau Tieng water reservoir project in the list of important projects related to national security. [19] [20] By June 2019, the first solar power plant was established on the submerged area within the Dau Tieng ...
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 ...
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 ...
Fath was a ghulām (slave soldier) of Mansur ibn Lu'lu', [1] the emir of Aleppo between 1008 and 1016. It is not clear when Fath was appointed as governor of the Citadel of Aleppo, but he was governor by at least 1014. [2] The name Fath al-Qal'i translates from Arabic as "Fath of the Citadel". [3]
Nguyễn Nhật Ánh was born in 1955 in Quảng Nam province, Vietnam. At an early age, he attended Tiểu La, Trần Cao Vân and Phan Chu Trinh schools. In 1973, he moved to Sài Gòn to pursue a teaching career. After graduating from Ho Chi Minh City Pedagogical University, he was a teacher and a member of the Hồ Chí Minh Communist Youth ...