Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Historian Richard Eaton criticised the Encyclopaedia of Islam in the book India's Islamic Traditions, 711–1750, published in 2003. He writes that in attempting to describe and define Islam, the project subscribes to the Orientalist , monolithic notion that Islam is a "bounded, self-contained entity".
During this time he was an editor of the Encyclopaedia of Islam. [4] Among his students was the British Arabist and Reader in Arabic, James Heyworth-Dunne. [6] In 1937 Gibb succeeded David Samuel Margoliouth as Laudian Professor of Arabic with a Fellowship at St John's College, Oxford, where he stayed for eighteen years. [4]
The first Islami Bishwakosh of Bangladesh project was launched by Bangla Academy.Dr Muhammad Shahidullah served as an editor for the project for a while. [2] [3] In 1958, the Shorter Encyclopedia of Islam was published from Leiden and it was a translation.
An Educational Encyclopedia of Islam; Encyclopaedia Islamica; Encyclopaedia of Islam; Encyclopaedia of Shia; Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān; Encyclopaedia of the World of Islam; Encyclopedia of Imam Ali
The word ‘Integrated’ indicates that the encyclopedia essays all themes, persons, things, places, and events mentioned in the Qur'an. [2] IEQ was then reconfigured as an open-access online work. The online edition consists of 515 articles which cover all concepts, persons, places, events and things mentioned in the Qurʾān.
An Educational Encyclopedia of Islam is a 2010 encyclopedia written by Islamic scholar Syed Iqbal Zaheer from Bangalore, India and published by Iqra Publishers. He is the editor of the Young Muslim Digest – a monthly Islamic magazine since 1976.
Encyclopaedia of the World of Islam (دانشنامه جهان اسلام) (Daaneshnaame-ye Jahaan-e Eslam) is a Persian encyclopedia that deals with Islam and the history, civilization, and culture of Muslims from the beginning of Islam until now. [1] This encyclopedia was published by the Encyclopaedia Islamica Foundation that has published ...
Islam: Past, Present and Future (2007) is a book by prominent theologian Hans Küng, and is a lengthy analysis of Islam's 1,400-year history. The book is the final in his trilogy on the three monotheistic faiths, following Judaism: Between Yesterday and Tomorrow (1991) and Christianity: Its Essence and History (1994).