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Divan-i Kabir (Persian: دیوان کبیر), also known as Divan-i Shams (دیوان شمس) and Divan-i Shams-i Tabrizi (دیوان شمس تبریزی), is a collection of poems written by the Persian poet and Sufi mystic Mawlānā Jalāl-ad-Dīn Muhammad Balkhī, also known as Rumi.
Established on 17 January 2007, it was the English-language edition of the Turkish daily Zaman. Today's Zaman included domestic and international coverage, and regularly published topical supplements. Its contributors included cartoonist Cem Kızıltuğ. On 4 March 2016, a state administrator was appointed to run Zaman as well as Today's Zaman. [2]
Tahir Zaman (born 1969), Pakistani field hockey player; Zaman Molla (born 1979), Iranian table tennis player; Zaman Shah Durrani (1770–1844), ruler of the Durrani Empire from 1793 to 1800; Mir Zaman Khan (1869–1929), Afghan hero of the 1919 Anglo-Afghan War
Rashid Askari (born June 1, 1965) is a prolific writer in Bangladesh writing both in Bangla and English. His English short story collection Nineteen Seventy One and Other Stories (2011) [32] claims the secured place in the English literary arena of Bangladesh. The author is firmly committed to the 1971 Liberation War spirit through this book.
The original manuscript no longer survives as an autograph, however, the Book of Stars has survived in later-made copies. This image from the book shows the constellation of Orion, in mirror image as if on a celestial globe, and is from a copy in the Bodleian Library dated to the 12th century AD. Ilustration credit: Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi
The Ulama in Contemporary Islam: Custodians of Change is a book by Muhammad Qasim Zaman, a professor at Princeton University.Published in 2002 by Princeton University Press under the series titled Princeton Studies in Muslim Politics, this academic work examines the ulama of South Asia, with a focus on the Deobandis.
Badi' al-Zamān al-Hamadānī or al-Hamadhānī (Persian: بديعالزمان همدانی; Arabic: بديع الزمان الهمذاني التغلبي; 969 in Hamadan، Iran – 1007) was a medieval poet and man of letters.
Zaman (Turkish:, literally "time" or "era"), sometimes stylized as ZAMAN, was a daily newspaper in Turkey. Zaman was a major, high-circulation daily [3] before government seizure on 4 March 2016 (the circulation was around 650,000 as of February 2016 [4]). It was founded in 1986 and was the first Turkish daily to go online in 1995. [5]