enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Imad ud-din Lahiz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imad_ud-din_Lahiz

    Imad ud-din Lahiz was among the fourth generation of Islamic scholars in the family. His father, Mohammed Siraj ud-din, grandfather and great-grandfather had all been maulvis (Muslim doctors of law or imams). The Lahiz family hailed from Panipat, a town situated in the modern day Haryana state of India.

  3. Noor-ul-Haq (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noor-ul-Haq_(book)

    In his book Tawzin ul-Aqwal, known for its highly critical and inflammatory nature, Imad ud-Din Lahiz criticised the style and language of the Quran, raised numerous objections against the personality of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and had criticised the concept of Jihad in Islam.

  4. List of former Muslims - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_former_Muslims

    Imad ud-din Lahiz – Prolific Islamic writer, preacher and Quranic translator. [229] Jabalah ibn al-Aiham – last ruler of the Ghassanid state in Syria and Jordan in the seventh century AD. After the Islamic conquest of Levant he converted to Islam in AD 638. He reverted to Christianity later on and lived in Anatolia until he died in AD 645 ...

  5. List of converts to Christianity from Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_converts_to...

    Imad ud-din Lahiz was an Islamic writer, preacher and Quranic translator, who converted to Christianity from Islam. Imad ud-din Lahiz – prolific Islamic writer, preacher and Qur'anic translator [69] Sake Dean Mahomed was a traveller, surgeon and entrepreneur who converted to Christianity from Sunni Islam. [70]

  6. Imad al-Din - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imad_al-Din

    Imad al-Din or Imad ad-Din (Arabic: عماد الدين, romanized: ʿImād al-Dīn), also Imad ud-din, is a male Muslim given name meaning "pillar of the religion, faith", composed from the nouns ‘imad, meaning pillar, and al-Din, of the faith. [1] [2] This theophoric name is formed from the Arabic male given name Imad.

  7. Karl Gottlieb Pfander - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Gottlieb_Pfander

    Karl Gottlieb Pfander (1803–1865), spelt also as Carl Gottlieb Pfander or C.G. Pfander, was a Lutheran Christian priest, missionary and apologist; he served as a missionary in Central Asia and Trans-Caucasus under the Basel Mission, and as a polemicist to the North-Western Provinces of India under the Church Missionary Society. [1]

  8. AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.

  9. Artuqids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artuqids

    The Artuqid dynasty (alternatively Artukid, Ortoqid, or Ortokid; Turkish: Artuklu Beyliği, Artuklular, pl. Artukoğulları; Turkmen: Artykly begligi, Artykogullary; Azerbaijani: Artuklu bəyliyi, Artıqlılar) was established in 1102 as an Anatolian Beylik (Principality) of the Seljuk Empire.