Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Aḥmad ibn Mājid (Arabic: أحمد بن ماجد), also known as the "Arab Admiral" (أمير البحر العربي, ʿAmīr al-Baḥr al-ʿArabī) and the "Lion of the Sea", [1] was an Arab navigator and cartographer born c. 1432 [2] in Julfar, the present-day Ras Al Khaimah in the United Arab Emirates.
Deobandis represent a group of scholars affiliated with the reformist Deobandi movement, which originated in the town of Darul Uloom Deoband in northern India. Founded in 1866, this movement sought to safeguard Islamic teachings amidst non-Muslim governance and societal changes. [1]
[117] Ibn Qayyim adds, referring to the four Sunni maddhabs: "There is no Jizya on the kids, women and the insane. This is the view of the four imams and their followers. Ibn Mundhir said, 'I do not know anyone to have differed with them.' Ibn Qudama said in al-Mughni, 'We do not know of any difference of opinion among the learned on this issue."
It was a well known landmark to navigators and legendary Arab explorer Ahmad ibn Mājid wrote of El-Sheikh and a few other notable landmarks and ports of the northern Somali coast, including Berbera, Siyara, the Sa'ad ad-Din islands aka the Zeila Archipelago near Zeila, Alula, Maydh, Ruguda, Heis and El-Darad. [5]
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Ahmad ibn Mājid
Ahmad ibn 'Ajiba was a Shadhili-Darqawi shaykh who wrote over 30 Islamic Sufi books. He was born in a village near Tetouan to a sharifian family, who originated from an Andalusian mountain village called 'Ayn al-Rumman ("the Spring of Pomegranates"). He showed from an early age an aptitude for the religious sciences and became a traditional 'alim
Ibn Hanbal died on Friday, 2 August 855 / 12 Rabi' al-Awwal, 241 AH at the age of 74–75 in Baghdad. Historians relate his funeral was attended by 800,000 men and 60,000 women, and 20,000 Christians and Jews converted to Islam on that day. [45] His grave is located in the premises of the Ahmad ibn Hanbal Mosque [46] [47] in al-Rusafa District.
Ahmad b. Muhammad b. Khalid al-Barqi (c.815 - c.887/894) Ya'qubi (died 898) Ahmad ibn A'tham (died 926) Qummi, Ali ibn Babwayh (died c.940) al-Kulayni, Muhammad ibn Ya‘qub (864–941) Al-Farabi (c.872-950) Muhammad b. 'Umar al-Kashshi (died c. 951) Muhammad b. al-Hasan b. Ahmad, known as Ibn al-Walid al-Qummi (c.883-954) Al-Masudi (c. 896 ...