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  2. Alhamdulillah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alhamdulillah

    ḥamd(u), literally meaning "praise", "commendation". li-llāh(i), preposition + noun Allāh. Li-is a dative preposition meaning "to". The word Allāh (Arabic: ٱللَّٰه) is the proper name of the God of Abraham. "Al ilah" means "The God", and it is a contraction of the definite article al-and the word ʾilāh (Arabic: إِلَٰه, "god ...

  3. Hamd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamd

    [1] Thus, The word "Hamd" is always followed by the name of God - a phrase known as the Tahmid - "al-ḥamdu li-llāh" (Arabic: الحَمْد لله) (English: "praise be to God"). The word "Hamd" comes from the Qur'an , and الحَمْد لله is the epithet or locution which, after the Bismillah , establishes the first verse of the first ...

  4. The Majestic Quran: An English Rendition of Its Meanings

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Majestic_Quran:_An...

    The Majestic Qur'an: An English Rendition of Its Meanings is a 20th century English translation of the meanings of Qur'an authored by four Turkish Sunni scholars. The translation is written in modern English, and contains more than 800 explanatory notes, makes the Scripture easier to understand. Although this translation describes itself as a ...

  5. al-Musta'li - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Musta'li

    [b] [7] [11] Another son of al-Mustansir had been born in 1060 with the same name—Abu'l-Qasim Ahmad—as the future al-Musta'li, and some later sources have confused this as al-Musta'li's birth date. It is assumed by modern scholars that this older brother had died in the meantime, allowing the name to be reused for al-Musta'li.

  6. Tafsir al-Alusi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tafsir_al-Alusi

    Yusuf Banuri, the favourite student of 'Allamah Anwar Shah Kashmiri (R'A), has written in his Yatīmatu-l-Bayān. Muqaddimah (Preface to) Mushkilātu-l-Qur'ān: The third is Tafseer Roohu-l-Ma'ani which in my opinion is an exegesis for the Qur'an on the pattern of Fath al-Bari, the exegesis of Sahih al-Bukhari, except that Fath al-Bari is the interpretation of human words.

  7. Byblos clay cone inscriptions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byblos_clay_cone_inscriptions

    The Byblos clay cones inscriptions are Phoenician inscriptions (TSSI III 2,3) on two clay cones discovered around 1950.. They were first published in Maurice Dunand's Fouilles de Byblos (volume II, 1954), but it was only twenty years later that their extremely old age was fully realized: they are now dated to the eleventh century BCE.

  8. Futuh al-Buldan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Futuh_al-Buldan

    Futūḥ al-Buldān was edited by M. J. de Goeje as Liber expugnationis regionum (Leiden, 1870; Cairo, 1901).. An English edition with the title "The Origins of the Islamic State" was published in two parts by Columbia University Press; vol. 1, translated by Philip Khuri Hitti (1916) [2] and vol. 2, translated by Francis Clark Murgotten (1924). [3]

  9. Tafsir Ibn Juzayy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Tashil_li-'Ulum_al-Tanzil

    Tafsir Ibn Juzayy, edited by 'Abd Allah al-Khalidi, 2 vols (Beirut: Dar al-'Arqam, 1995)Al-Tashil li Ulum al-Tanzil (Arabic: التسهيل لعلوم التنزيل, romanized: Facilitation of the Sciences of Revelation), [1] better known as Tafsir Ibn Juzayy (Arabic: تفسير ابن جُزَيّ), is a classical Sunni tafsir of the Qur'an, authored by the Maliki-Ash'ari scholar Ibn Juzayy.