Fifty Key Figures in IslamRoutledge, 27/09/2006 - 280 من الصفحات The perfect resource for those wishing to learn more about the Muslim culture, its people and its teachings, Fifty Key Figures in Islam explores the lives and thoughts of fifty influential individuals in Islam and surveys a heritage that spans 1,500 years. Covering key figures such as the Prophet Muhammad, Suleiman 'the Magnificent' and El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz (Malcolm X), the entry for each figure includes:
Fully cross-referenced for ease of use, this clearly presented work is ideal for those interested in or studying the area, and could not have come at a more fascinating time in history for Islam. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 58
الصفحة
... Islam and the Muslim world at the time, for I was only a teenager who had no Muslim friends or any connection with ... Shi'a Islam', 'fatwa', and so on, yet these are now commonly understood (or commonly misunderstood) terms. The 1980s ...
... Islam and the Muslim world at the time, for I was only a teenager who had no Muslim friends or any connection with ... Shi'a Islam', 'fatwa', and so on, yet these are now commonly understood (or commonly misunderstood) terms. The 1980s ...
الصفحة
... Muslim (a submitter to the one God). Certainly, one of the earliest was his cousin and son-in-law, Ali ibn Abi Talib, who was later to become the fourth Caliph as well as the first Imam of the branch of Islam known as Shi'a. Another early ...
... Muslim (a submitter to the one God). Certainly, one of the earliest was his cousin and son-in-law, Ali ibn Abi Talib, who was later to become the fourth Caliph as well as the first Imam of the branch of Islam known as Shi'a. Another early ...
الصفحة
... Muslim community. According to the Shi'a tradition, Muhammad had designated his cousin and son-in-law Ali ibn Abi Tatib to be the next leader, although the majority of Muslims, now known as the Sunni, reject this. It seems that Muhammad ...
... Muslim community. According to the Shi'a tradition, Muhammad had designated his cousin and son-in-law Ali ibn Abi Tatib to be the next leader, although the majority of Muslims, now known as the Sunni, reject this. It seems that Muhammad ...
الصفحة
... Shi'a Muslims regard Umar as usurping the position that belonged to Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law, Ali ibn Abi Talib. Further. Reading. Umar himself did not write anything and there is little information available concerning his early ...
... Shi'a Muslims regard Umar as usurping the position that belonged to Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law, Ali ibn Abi Talib. Further. Reading. Umar himself did not write anything and there is little information available concerning his early ...
الصفحة
... Muslim community after the death of the Prophet, in 632, until 661 when Ali was assassinated. For the Shi'a Muslims he is the first Imam and rightful heir to the leadership after the death of the Prophet as they believe that Muhammad ...
... Muslim community after the death of the Prophet, in 632, until 661 when Ali was assassinated. For the Shi'a Muslims he is the first Imam and rightful heir to the leadership after the death of the Prophet as they believe that Muhammad ...
المحتوى
Rabia of Basra c 717801 | |
Muhammad ibn Abd alWahhab 17031792 | |
Yaqub ibn Ishaq alKindi Alkindus c 801873 | |
Abu Nasr alFarabi Avennasar c 870950 | |
Abu Ali ibn Sina Avicenna 9801037 | |
Abu alWalid Muhammad ibn Rushd Averroes 11261198 | |
Shah WaliAllah 17031762 | |
Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan 18171898 | |
Sir Muhammad Iqbal 18731938 | |
Hasan alBana 19061949 | |
Hasan AlTurabi b 1932 | |
Rachid Ghannoushi b 1941 | |
Index | |
alFarabi Abu Nasr Avennasar c 870950 | |
Salah alDin Saladin 11381193 | |
Muhammad ibn Arabi 11651240 | |
Ibn Taymiyya 12631328 | |
Suleiman the Magnificent c 14941566 | |
Iqbal Muhammad 18731938 | |
Mulla SadraSadr alDin Shirazi c 15721640 | |
alShafii Muhammad 768820 | |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Abbasid Abduh Ahmad Khan Akbar al-Afghani al-Bana al-Farabi al-Ghazali al-Kindi al-Ma’mun al-Shafi’i al-Shi’i al-Shirazi al-Tabari al-Turabi al-Wahhab al-Zamakhshari Arabic argued Baghdad became believed British Cairo Caliph commentary death divine dynasty Egypt fact father Further Reading Ghannoushi God’s hadith Hasan Ibn Arabi Ibn Hanbal Ibn Khaldun Ibn Rushd Ibn Sina Ibn Taymiyya ijtihad illuminationist Imam important India intellectual interpretation Iqbal Iran Islamic law Islamic world Ismaili jurists Khomeini knowledge London major Malcolm Malcolm X Mawdudi Mecca Mongol movement Mu’awiya Mu’tazilite Muhammad ibn Muslim Brotherhood mystical Nasir al-Din nonetheless Ottoman Oxford Persian philosophical political Prophet Muhammad Qur’an Qutb Rabi’a reason religion religious revelation Rida rule ruler Rumi Rumi’s Salafiyyah Salah al-Din Saljuk Sayyid scholars shari’a Shariati Shi’a Shi’a Islam society Soroush spiritual Sufism Suhrawardi Suleiman Sultan Sunni Taha teaching theologian theology tradition trans translated ulama University Press vizier Wahhabis Wali Allah Western writings