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El Houari Mohammed Ben Brahim Assarraj (Arabic: محمد بن إبراهيم بن السراج المراكشي; 1897–1955) was a poet from Morocco. He is especially well known as the poet of Marrakech of the first part of the 20th century. He wrote poems for both king Mohammed V and for his opponent El Glaoui.
As a poet, novelist, painter, translator and literary critic, Jabra was a versatile man of letters. He also translated many works of English literature into Arabic, including Shakespeare's major tragedies, William Faulkner 's The Sound and the Fury , chapters 29–33 of Sir James Frazer 's The Golden Bough and some of the work of T. S. Eliot .
Sambandar, Tamil Shaiva Poet and who was one of the 63 Nayanars who composed 16,000 hymns [256] Sri Sri, Indian poet who is known for his works in Telugu literature and anthology Maha Prasthanam [257] Subramani Bharathi, Tamil poet popularly known as "Mahakavi Bharathi" ("Great Poet Bharathi"), he was a pioneer of modern Tamil poetry [258] [259]
Binoy has often been regarded by critics as a true successor of Jibanananda Das, [7] the poet who revolutionized Bengali poetry in the post-Tagore era. Like Jibanananda, Binoy drew his material from bountiful nature, the fields and the jungles and the rivers and the fauna of Bengal. But Binoy's originality lay in his attempt to relate the ...
When he returned to Tamegroute his master, Sheikh Ahmad, recognising his talent as a poet, supported the writing of his first work in Shilha, entitled Al-Ḥawḍ "The Reservoir". This work, divided in two parts ( ʿibādāt and muʿāmalāt ) like other works on Islamic law , is a complete legal manual according to the Maliki school .
Yahya bin Haji Ibrahim (21 August 1939 – 2022), also known by his pen name Yahya M.S., Bruneian aristocrat, Syariah judge, poet, and politician.He served as the deputy minister of religious affairs from 1986 to 2005 and held several key positions in the Bruneian government throughout his career.
Hafez Ibrahim (Arabic: حافظ إبراهيم, ALA-LC: Ḥāfiẓ Ibrāhīm; 1871–1932) was a well known Egyptian poet of the early 20th century. He was dubbed the "Poet of the Nile", and sometimes the "Poet of the People", for his political commitment to the poor. [1]
One of the most famous of these biographies was written in New Persian by Rumi, which was adapted [according to whom?] into Arabic. [9] Other such biographies were written in Urdu, Awadhi, [11] and Malay, which laid the basis for short biographies in Javanese and Sundanese. English poet Leigh Hunt's poem "Abou Ben Adhem" is a story of Ibrahim ...