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  2. Muhammad al-Faqih al-Muqaddam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_al-Faqih_al-Muqaddam

    The Title al-Faqih was given because he was a great teacher who mastered a lot of religious sciences, including the science of jurisprudence. One of his teachers, Ali Bamarwan said that he mastered the science of jurisprudence as great as the former scholar Muhammad ibn al-Hasan ibn al-Shafi'i Furak who died in 406 H. [2]

  3. Salah Asuhan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salah_Asuhan

    Salah Asuhan is generally considered one of the most important works in modern Indonesian Literature and is commonly used as reading material in Indonesian literature classes. [2] Bakri Siregar wrote positively of Salah Asuhan, considering the diction unparalleled in its contemporaries and the characters well fleshed-out. [3]

  4. Muqaddimah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muqaddimah

    The Muqaddimah (Arabic: مقدّمة "Introduction"), also known as the Muqaddimah of Ibn Khaldun (Arabic: مقدّمة ابن خلدون) or Ibn Khaldun's Prolegomena (Ancient Greek: Προλεγόμενα), is a book written by the historian Ibn Khaldun in 1377 which presents a view of universal history. [1]

  5. Lazimi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lazimi

    The Sufi members of the Tijaniyyah order distinguish themselves by a number of practices relating to their spiritual life and their mystical process and itinerary. [3]During the initiation rite to the tariqa order, one murid receives the Tijānī wird, also called lazimi, from a muqaddam or a sheikh representative of the Sunni order.

  6. Introduction to the Science of Hadith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Introduction_to_the...

    (Ibn al-Ṣalāḥ's) Introduction to the Science of Hadith (Arabic: مقدمة ابن الصلاح في علوم الحديث, romanized: Muqaddimah ibn al-Ṣalāḥ fī ‘Ulūm al-Ḥadīth) is a 13th-century book written by `Abd al-Raḥmān ibn `Uthmān al-Shahrazūrī, better known as Ibn al-Ṣalāḥ, which describes the Islamic discipline of the science of hadith, its terminology and ...

  7. East Syriac Rite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Syriac_Rite

    The East Syriac Rite, or East Syrian Rite (also called the Edessan Rite, Assyrian Rite, Persian Rite, Chaldean Rite, Nestorian Rite, Babylonian Rite or Syro-Oriental Rite), is an Eastern Christian liturgical rite that employs the Divine Liturgy of Saints Addai and Mari and utilizes the East Syriac dialect as its liturgical language.

  8. Ba 'Alawiyya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ba_'Alawiyya

    The name Ba'Alawi itself is a Hadhrami contraction of the terms Bani 'Alawi or the Clan of 'Alawi.. In the early fourth century Hijri at 318 H, Sayyid Ahmad al-Muhaajir bin Isa bin Muhammad al-Naqib bin Ali al-Uraydi bin Ja'far al-Sadiq migrated from Basrah, Iraq first to Mecca and Medina, and then to Hadhramout, to avoid the chaos then prevalent in the Abbasid Caliphate, where descendants of ...

  9. Acts of Mar Mari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acts_of_Mar_Mari

    The Acts of Mar Mari [ܦܪܲܟܣܝ̣ܣ ܕܡܳܪܝ ܡܳܐܪܝ̣] is a Syriac Christian apocryphal acts. [1] It pertains to the introduction of Christianity in northern and southern Mesopotamia by Addai 's disciple Saint Mari in the first century and in the beginning of the second century AD.