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In 1976 the University of Tripoli was renamed Al Fateh University [7] after the student unrest in April, 1976, where pro-government students chanted Al Fateh. [8] [9] The university was the site of a student uprising by the Students' Union (SU) during the August 2011 Battle of Tripoli, part of the 2011 Libyan Civil War. In 2012, the university ...
Al Fath (Arabic: The Victory) was a weekly political magazine which existed between 1926 and 1948 in Cairo, Egypt.The magazine is known for its cofounder and editor Muhib Al Din Al Khatib and for its role in introducing Hasan Al Banna, founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, to the Egyptian political life.
Al-Fath (Arabic: الفتح, al-fatḥ; meaning: "The Victory") is the 48th chapter of the Qur'an with 29 verses . The surah was revealed in Madinah in the sixth year of the Hijrah, on the occasion of the Treaty of Hudaybiya between the Muslim city-state of Madinah and Makkan polytheists. It mentions this victory, then criticizes the attitudes ...
A copy from the manuscript "Unwan al Hikam", Umm al-Qura University, Nr. 15281-2. The poem is also known under the title of "Unwan al-Hikam" ("The Title for Wisdoms") and "Ziyadat ul-Mar’i fi-Dunyahi Nuqsan" ("To Rise in One's World Is to Decline"). It is a Qasida which relates to moral aphorisms and akhlaq (good character).
Fatimah bint Harun al-Rashid, daughter of Caliph Harun al-Rashid and wife of Ja'far ibn Musa al-Hadi; Fatimah bint Musa, daughter of Musa al-Kadhim and sister of Ali al-Ridha, two of the Twelve Imams; Fatimah bint al-Fath ibn Khaqan, also known as Fatimah Khatun bint al-Fath was the spouse of Abbasid caliph Al-Mu'tazz (r. 866–869).
The Conquest Brigade (Arabic: لواء الفتح, romanized: Liwa al-Fath), [a] also known as Battalion of Conquest or al-Fatah Brigade, [26] is a Sunni Islamist Free Syrian Army group that takes part in the Syrian Civil War.
Homs University (Arabic: جامعة حمص, ALA-LC: Jāmiʻat Ḥimṣ), founded in 1979 as Al-Baath University during Ba'athist rule, [1] is a public university located in the city of Homs, Syria, 180 km north of Damascus. It is Syria's fourth largest university.
Ali ibn al-Hasan ibn Qahtaba (807–809) Mansur ibn Muhammad al-Mahdi (809–810) Ahmad ibn Sa'id al-Harashi (810) Sulayman ibn al-Mansur (810) Muhammad ibn Salih ibn Bayhas (813–823 or 824/825) Ma'yuf ibn Yahya ibn Ma'yuf al-Hamdani or Sadaqa ibn Uthman al-Murri (appointed by viceroy Abdallah ibn Tahir al-Khurasani) (825–?)