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Muhammad bin Idris bin Idris bin Abdullah (Arabic: محمد بن إدريس بن إدريس بن عبد الله) was the third Idrisid sultan of Morocco. Life [ edit ]
Idris (I) ibn Abd Allah (Arabic: إدريس بن عبد الله, romanized: Idrīs ibn ʿAbd Allāh; d. 791), also known as Idris the Elder (إدريس الأكبر, Idrīs al-Akbar), was a Hasanid and the founder of the Idrisid dynasty in part of northern Morocco, after fleeing the Hejaz as a result of the Battle of Fakhkh. [1]
Idris bin Idris (Arabic: إدريس بن إدريس) known as Idris II (Arabic: إدريس الثاني) (August 791 – August 828), was the son of Idris I, the founder of the Idrisid dynasty in Morocco. He was born in Walīlī two months after the death of his father. He succeeded his father Idris I in 803.
Through Muhammad's grandson Hasan ibn Ali, Nafisah was a descendant of Muhammad, and she married another descendant of Muhammad, Ishaq al-Mu'tamin. Ishaq was the son of Ja'far al-Sadiq , a teacher of al-Shafi'i's teachers Malik ibn Anas, [ 4 ] [ 22 ] : 121 as well as Abu Hanifah.
Ali was the son of Muhammad ibn Idris, whom he succeeded in March/April 836 at the age of nine. [1] During his infancy, the chieftains of the Berber tribes acted as his regents. [ 1 ] He proved an able ruler, who managed to stabilize and pacify the Idrisid realm after the troubled reign of his father. [ 1 ]
Muhammad bin Ali al-Idrisi was born in Sabya in the Yemen Vilayet (now Saudi Arabia and Yemen).He was the grandson of Sayyid Ahmad ibn Idris al-Fasi, a Moroccan scholar from Fez, who was head of a religious fraternity (tariqa) at Mecca.
Muhammad Abdullah Hasan, follower of the Salihiyya path which rejects seeking intercession from Saints in one's invocation of God, which it labels as Shirk. [13] Shaikh Muhammad Said al-Linggi, who introduced a path of this order into Singapore by the followers of al-Linggi. [1] Shaikh Hafiz Muhammad Amin bin Abdul Rehman from Multan.
Abu Abdullah Muhammad al-Idrisi al-Qurtubi al-Hasani as-Sabti, or simply al-Idrisi / æ l ɪ ˈ d r iː s iː / (Arabic: أبو عبد الله محمد الإدريسي القرطبي الحسني السبتي; Latin: Dreses; 1100–1165), was a Muslim geographer and cartographer who served in the court of King Roger II at Palermo, Sicily.