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  2. Al-Masih ad-Dajjal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Masih_ad-Dajjal

    Ad-Dajjal (Arabic: ٱلدَّجَّالُ, romanized: ad-Dajjāl, lit. 'Deceitful'), [1] otherwise referred to simply as the Dajjal, is an evil figure in Islamic eschatology who will pretend to be the promised Messiah and later claim to be God, appearing before the Day of Judgment according to the Islamic eschatological narrative.

  3. List of spiritual entities in Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_spiritual_entities...

    Dajjal, deceiver in the End-Times, False Prophet. (Devil or Other) Darda'il (The Journeyers), who travel the earth searching out assemblies where people remember God's name. [13] (Angel) al-Dik, an angel in the shape of a rooster. He is responsible for the crowing of cockerels and announcing time. [14] (Angel)

  4. The Heavenly Decree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Heavenly_Decree

    He was called Dajjal, Mulhid, Zindiq, Makkar, Mal‘un, etc. [2] Molvi Muhammad Hussain Batalvi wrote in his magazine Isha’t-us-Sunnah; that Ahmad was a "raving drunkard, intriguer, swindler, accursed, the one-eyed Dajjal, slave of silver and gold, whose revelation is nothing but a seminal discharge, shameless, the ring-leader of sweepers and ...

  5. Tamim al-Dari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamim_al-Dari

    The chained man is eager to ask them questions about the outside world, asking about the natural condition of various locations, and the arrival of Muhammad. After the tribesmen answer him, the chained man announces he is the Dajjal, and provides them eschatological details related to the future, warning them of his advent. The tribesmen left ...

  6. Gharqad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gharqad

    The narratives on the Dajjal's end time reign and ultimate defeat were unreliable because of: questionable origin and transmitters, weak chains of hadith authentication, internal contradictions on this topic within the hadith corpus as a whole (that invalidate all of its parts), and the fact that these narratives contradict the Qur'anic text.

  7. Jesus in Ahmadiyya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus_in_Ahmadiyya

    Mirza Ghulam Ahmad elaborated on the depictions of Antichrist as prophecised in the Bible and the hadith concerning the emergence of the Dajjal. These are interpreted in Ahmadiyya teachings, in metaphorical terms - to denote a group of nations centred upon falsehood. The reference to the Dajjal is personified as a unified system - a chain of ...

  8. Saf ibn Sayyad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saf_ibn_Sayyad

    Saf ibn Sayyad (Arabic: الصف بن الصياد), later known as Abdullah ibn Sa'id (Arabic: عبد الله بن سعيد), was an alleged claimant of prophethood during the time of Islamic prophet Muhammad and his companions who later disappeared after the Ridda wars.

  9. Al-Malhama Al-Kubra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Malhama_Al-Kubra

    [4] [9] He will kill the Dajjal, the tradition continues, kill the swine, abolish the jizya tax and destroy the cross. [citation needed] Certain places are significant in the Malhama Al-Kubra narrative cycle. One of the significant locations is Dabiq, Syria where many texts say it will take place. [5]