Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In due course, Ali proceeded to Dhaka. This later migration is explained by the engulfment of Girdah as a result of Padma River erosion and Ali's desire to become initiated into the Chishti Order by Shah Bahar, a Sufi saint based in Dhaka. [2] Nevertheless, Ali also contributed to spreading Islam in Dhaka, where he remained until the rest of ...
Hazrat Pir Syed Ghulam Haider Ali Shah (Jalalpur Sharif, Jhelum, Pakistan) Moulana Ash'Shaikh Muhammad Khan Hanafi Qadri Naqshbandi.(1920-1980) Jaranwala Road Faisalabad Syedi wa Moulaya Bhaijee Bhai Saheb, Chand Bibi Road, Ranchore Lane, Karachi, Pakistan. Syed Sajjad Ali Chishti Nizami Sabri Qadri Moradabadi, Railway Headquarter, Lahore Punjab.
Shah Ali (Persian: شاه علی) may refer to: . Aliabad (34°02′ N 48°10′ E), Khaveh-ye Jonubi, a village in Khaveh-ye Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Delfan County, Lorestan Province, Iran
Shah-Ali (Volga Türki and Persian: شاه علی, or Shahghali; Russian: Шах-Али; Tatar: Шаһгали / Şahğali; also known as Shig-Aley; Russian: Шиг-Алей; [1] 1505–1567) was a khan of the Qasim Khanate and the Khanate of Kazan.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
It is unknown how and when Balkhi died. During the reign of Mughal emperor Aurangzeb in 1685, the dargah of Balkhi was a rent-free land and sanads were issued to Syed Muhammad Tahir, Syed Abd ar-Rahman and Syed Muhammad Reza. [4] The Mughals paid great attention to the shrine and built a gate entry to Balkhi's mausoleum called Buri Ka Darwaza. [8]
Ishqiya is the soundtrack album to the 2010 film of the same name directed by Abhishek Chaubey and written and produced by Vishal Bhardwaj, starring Vidya Balan, Naseeruddin Shah and Arshad Warsi. Bhardwaj also composed the film's music with lyrics written by Gulzar and Hitesh Sonik and Clinton Cerejo produced the film's soundtrack, with the ...
The song was written by Nawab Wajid Ali Shah, the 19th-century Nawab of Awadh, as a lament when he was exiled from his beloved Lucknow by the British Raj before the failed Rebellion of 1857. He uses the bidaai (bride's farewell) of a bride from her father's ( babul ) home as a metaphor for his own banishment from his beloved Lucknow to far away ...