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The Hasanids (Arabic: بنو حسن, romanized: Banū Ḥasan or حسنيون, Ḥasaniyyūn) are the descendants of Hasan ibn Ali, brother of Husayn ibn Ali and grandson of Muhammad. They are a branch of the Alids (the descendants of Ali ibn Abi Talib ), and one of the two most important branches of the ashrāf (the other being the descendants ...
According to the historian Nancy Khalek, they consequently became an "indispensable" group of Muslim society in early Islamic Syria. [21] Mu'awiya actively sought the militarily and administratively experienced Syrian Christians, including the Ghassanids, and members of the tribe served him and later Umayyad caliphs as governors, commanders of ...
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the various lines of Shi'a imams are largely Husaynid, being descended patrilineally from Husayn ibn Ali, the third imam. This applies to the Twelver Shi'a imams, the Zaydiyya, and the various lines of Isma'ili imams.
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Ja'far ibn Muhammad ibn Husayn al-Hasani was Sharif of Mecca from the late 960s to the early 970s, and the first emir belonging to the Musawid dynasty.. He was a Hasanids, descendant of the ninth generation from Hasan ibn Ali. [1]
The genealogy of the Salihids is highly obscure, though a scholarly consensus holds that they ultimately derived from the Quda'a tribal group. [8] Tribes of the Quda'a had been settled in the Oriens (Byzantine Syria) and northern Arabia since ancient times. [ 8 ]
In chemistry, cyanide (from Greek kyanos 'dark blue') is a chemical compound that contains a C≡N functional group. This group, known as the cyano group, consists of a carbon atom triple-bonded to a nitrogen atom. [1] In inorganic cyanides, the cyanide group is present as the cyanide anion − C≡N. This anion is extremely poisonous.