Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Abdelhamid Sharaf (Arabic: الشريف عبدالحميد شرف; 8 July 1939 – 3 July 1980), was a Jordanian politician born in Iraq who served as the 24th Prime Minister of Jordan from December 1979 until his death of a heart attack after seven months in office. King Hussein announced the death in a live radio broadcast and said that ...
Goutham VS of The Indian Express wrote "While watching Kuttavum Sikshayum, you might be reminded of Churuli, but the narrative of Rajeev Ravi's latest movie is as realistic as it can get." [12] Padmakumar. K of Onmanorama wrote "The merits of the plot are dragged down by the lack of a solid script. Though, at times it provides the charm of a ...
The movie depicts the events of the Third Crusade. What happened during those events is that after Saladin reclaimed Jerusalem, the European powers led by King Richard of England, Emperor Barbarossa of the Holy Roman Empire and King Phillip Augustus of France joined together to reclaim it and return it to Christian hands. This resulted in the ...
He starred in an American movie, Cairo (1963), starring George Sanders and Faten Hamama. [10] Followed by Saladin the Victorious (1963) opposite Salah Zulfikar , Nadia Lutfi , among others. Later, Mazhar appeared in Shafika and Metwali (1979) alongside Soad Hosny . [ 11 ]
Sharaf al-Din (Arabic: شرف الدين, romanized: Sharaf al-Dīn, lit. 'Honor/Eminence of the Faith') and Sharif al-Din (Arabic: شریف الدین) are two related male Muslim given names. The Turkish form of the name is Şerafettin. They may refer to: Sharaf al-Din Qaraqush (d. 1212), Ayyubid commander and adventurer
Nasser 56 is a 1996 Egyptian historical film directed by Mohammed Fadel and starring Ahmed Zaki.The film focuses on the nationalization of the Suez Canal by Egypt's second President, Gamal Abdel Nasser, and the subsequent Suez War with Israel, the United Kingdom, and France.
The Ilkhan had given Sharaf al-Din Mahmud Shah control of the injü (or inji; the Mongol word for the royal estates). Sharaf al-Din was reportedly descended from 'Abd-Allah Ansari, an 11th-century mystic of Herat. His son, Amir Ghiyas al-Din Kai-Khusrau, assisted another family, the Muzaffarids, in their takeover of Yazd. By 1325 Sharaf al-Din ...
Born 1872 in Kadhimiya in the Ottoman Iraq to a Lebanese family of prominent religious scholars. His father al-Sayyid Yusuf Sharaf al-Din was from the village of Shuhur in Jebel Amel, the Shia area of what is now Southern Lebanon, [7] and studied in Najaf, whilst his mother was Zahra Sadr, the daughter of Ayatollah al-Sayyid Hadi al-Sadr and the sister of al-Sayyid Hasan al-Sadr [permanent ...