Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ibrahim ibn Yaqub's journey. Ibrahim ibn Yaqub (Arabic: إبراهيم بن يعقوب Ibrâhîm ibn Ya'qûb al-Ṭarṭûshi or al-Ṭurṭûshî; Hebrew: אברהם בן יעקב, Avraham ben Yaʿakov; fl. 961–62) was a 10th-century Hispano-Arabic, Sephardi Jewish traveler, probably a merchant, who may have also engaged in diplomacy and espionage.
Yaqubzais are the descendants of Yaqub, the eldest son of Gandapur. Yaqub though the eldest one, was not the most brilliant of his four sons and hence the whole family of Gandapur was led by Ibrahim Khan the second son. The descendants of Ibrahim Khan are known as Ibrahim Zai(sons of Ibrahim). Yaquzai are a small segment of the whole tribe of ...
Yaqub Beg (1820–1877), Tajik adventurer; Yaqub Ibn as-Sikkit (died 857), philologist tutor, grammarian and scholar of poetry; Yaqub ibn Ibrahim al-Ansari; Yaqub Spata (died 1416), last Lord of Arta; Yaqub al-Mustamsik was the fifteenth century figurehead caliph of Mamluk Sultanate. Yaqub-Har, pharaoh of ancient Egypt
Ya'qubi was born in Baghdad [3] to a family of noble background, his great-grandfather was Wadih, the freedman of the caliph Al-Mansur and ruler of Egypt during the reign of al-Mahdi.
Abu Ishaq Ibrahim ibn Ya'qub ibn Ishaq al-Sa'di al-Juzajani (Arabic: أبو إسحاق إبراهيم بن يعقوب بن إسحاق السعدي الجوزجاني, born around 796 CE/180 AH [1] – died 872 CE/259 AH [2]) was a Muslim hadith scholar, [3] one of the imams of al-jarh wa al-ta'deel and a student of Ahmad ibn Hanbal.
The Volga trade route and other European routes, according to Ibrahim ibn Jakub (10th century), were serviced by Radanite Jewish merchants. Theophanes mentions that the Umayyad caliph Mu'awiya I settled a whole army of 5,000 Slavic mercenaries in Syria who had defected from the Byzantine side in the 660s. [ 6 ]
William Muir's depiction of the original round city of Baghdad (1883), where Yaʿqūb ibn Ṭāriq was active during his career. Yaʿqūb ibn Ṭāriq was active in Baghdad as an astronomer during the rule of the second Abbasid caliph, al-Manṣūr (r.
By 854, the ayyars managed to expel Ibrahim ibn al-Hudain, who was the Tahirid governor of Sistan. Another ayyar leader, Dirham ibn Nasr, succeeded in unseating Salih as the king of Sistan in 858. However, in 861, Ya'qub overthrew Dirham, and gave himself the title of Emir at that point. [10] [5]