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  2. Padang Lawas Regency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Padang_Lawas_Regency

    Padang Lawas is a regency in the North Sumatra province of Indonesia.It covers an area of 3,912.18 km 2, and had a population of 226,807 at the 2010 Census [2] and 261,011 at the 2020 Census; [3] the official estimate as of mid-2023 was 275,648 - comprising 138,506 males and 137,142 females. [1]

  3. Padang Lawas archaeological site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Padang_Lawas...

    Buddha bronze statue found at Si Pamatung in Barumun Tengah district. Padang Lawas is an archaeological site in Indonesia in Padang Lawas Regency and North Padang Lawas Regency in North Sumatra.

  4. Lawas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawas

    Lawas (Malay: Pekan Lawas) is a small town and the capital of Lawas District, Limbang Division, Sarawak, Malaysia.This district area is 3,811.90 square kilometres, and population (year 2020 census) was 46,200.

  5. Bahal temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahal_temple

    Buddha Amitabha bronze statue found at Si Pamatung in Barumun Tengah district. Candi Bahal are one of a group of temples discovered in Padang Lawas. [2] Padang Lawas (Minangkabau "broad plain") is a grassy flat plain located between the Barisan Mountains and the highlands of northern Sumatra. [3]

  6. Al-Bazzi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Bazzi

    Abu al-Hasan Ahmad Ibn Muhammad Ibn ‘Abdillah Ibn al-Qasim Ibn Nafi'i Ibn Abi Bazzah (Arabic: أحمد بن محمد بن عبدالله بن القاسم بن نافع بن أبي بزَّة), better known simply as al-Bazzi (170–250AH) (786/7–864/5 CE), [1] [2] was an important figure in the transmission of Qira'at, the seven canonical methods of Qur'an reading. [3]

  7. Al-Mu'awwidhatayn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Mu'awwidhatayn

    The genre of these surahs has been described as prophylactic incantations, meant to ward off evil, and to be recited in a private as opposed to a public domain. [6] One stylistic feature of the Al-Mu'awwidhatayn, shared only in Surah 1 and Surah 109 elsewhere in the Quran, is the use of the first-person human voice throughout the entire surah. [7]