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Topic: Abd ar-Rahman I



  
 Abd ar-Rahman Ibn Muhammad Ibn Khaldun
Abd ar-Rahman Ibn Muhammad Ibn Khaldun (1332 - 1406)
http://www.fnf.org.za/Liberal_Thinkers/khaldun.htm   (431 words)

  
 chapterfive.html
Another part was later added to the southern end by Abd ar-Rahman II in 833, while his son Emir Muhammad (852-886) renovated the older part adding, in the process, a chamber, maqsurah', for the rulers to rest and meet with the 'ulama', the clergy, after prayers.
For him, it was destiny which blinded the Abbasids from finding his great ancestor 'Abd ar-Rahman I, brought him across the north African desert to Al-Andalus, and enabled him to revive the Umayyad glory in the west after it had vanished in the east.
But 'Abd ar-Rahman was not oblivious of the danger, and was able to confront the Fatimids courageously and forcefully, and although he had protected the integrity of the state quite efficiently, one important element had skipped his mind, namely, the importance of having a strong naval force.
http://www.artopedia.com/chapter4.html   (7072 words)

  
 Arabia
`Abd al-Wahhab Muhammad ibn Abu Nuqta ar-Rufayda (
Abul Walid Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan.................685-705 opposed by...
Abu'l Qassim Muhammad (the Prophet) ibn 'Abdallah al-Hashimi...622-632
http://www.hostkingdom.net/arabia.html   (7072 words)

  
 João Sedycias: História da Língua Espanhola
One of the first political problems of an international nature that was posed for 'Abd ar-Rahman III was that of his juridical status vis-à-vis the 'Abbasid caliphate at Baghdad.
Upon the death of 'Abd ar-Rahman Sanchuelo, 21 years of unrest followed (1009-31), during which the social and political unity among "Andalusians" (Arabs, Berbers who had settled in Al-Andalus a long time earlier, and the population that had converted to Islam), Berbers who had arrived fairly recently, and the slaves fell apart.
'Abd ar-Rahman I's successors, Hisham I (788-796) and al-Hakam I (796-822), were confronted with severe internal dissidence among the Arab nobility.
http://home.yawl.com.br/hp/sedycias/historia11a.htm   (7387 words)

  
 chapterfive.html
Another part was later added to the southern end by Abd ar-Rahman II in 833, while his son Emir Muhammad (852-886) renovated the older part adding, in the process, a chamber, maqsurah', for the rulers to rest and meet with the 'ulama', the clergy, after prayers.
For him, it was destiny which blinded the Abbasids from finding his great ancestor 'Abd ar-Rahman I, brought him across the north African desert to Al-Andalus, and enabled him to revive the Umayyad glory in the west after it had vanished in the east.
But 'Abd ar-Rahman was not oblivious of the danger, and was able to confront the Fatimids courageously and forcefully, and although he had protected the integrity of the state quite efficiently, one important element had skipped his mind, namely, the importance of having a strong naval force.
http://www.artopedia.com/chapter4.html   (7072 words)

  
 America Encyclopedia
The first war was fought in the early 650 and ended with the defeat of an Arab force led by Abd ar-Rahman ibn Rabiah outside the Khazar town of Balanjar, after a battle in which both sides used siege engines on the others' troops.
Arab armies led first by the Arab prince Maslamah ibn Abd al-Malik and then by Marwan ibn Muhammad (later Caliph Marwan II) poured across the Caucasus and eventually (in 737) defeated a Khazar army led by Hazer Tarkhan, briefly occupying Atil itself and possibly forcing the Khagan to convert to Islam.
Abraham ibn Daud, a twelfth-century Spanish rabbi, reported meeting Khazar rabbinical students in Toledo, and that they informed him that the "remnant of them is of the rabbinic faith." This reference indicates that some Khazars maintained ethnic, if not political, autonomy at least two centuries after the sack of Atil.
http://www.americaencyclopedia.com/index.php?title=Khazaria   (7072 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Khazar
The first war was fought in the early 650 and ended with the defeat of an Arab force led by Abd ar-Rahman ibn Rabiah outside the Khazar town of Balanjar, after a battle in which both sides used seige machines on the others' troops.
Arab armies led first by the Arab prince Maslamah ibn Abd al-Malik and then by Marwan ibn Muhammad (later Caliph Marwan II) poured across the Caucasus and eventually (in 737) defeated a Khazar army led by Hazer Tarkhan, briefly occupying Atil itself and possibly forcing the Khagan to convert to Islam.
Abraham ibn Daud, a twelfth-century Spanish rabbi, reported meeting Khazar rabbinical students in Toledo, and that they informed him that the "remnant of them is of the rabbinic faith." This reference indicates that some Khazars maintained ethnic, if not political, autonomy at least two centuries after the sack of Atil.
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Khazar   (7072 words)

  
 The Caliphate: Its Rise, Decline, and Fall - From Original Sources [Chapter 27]
In the tenor of the traditions relating how 'Abd ar-Rahman first questioned 'Ali and then 'Othman, and in their replies, I hardly find sufficient ground for this assumption; and it looks very much of a piece with the 'Abbasid fabrications of later days.
'Abd ar-Rahman spent the night in visiting the leading Citizens, and the chief officers from the Provinces (who, having come for the yearly Pilgrimage, had not yet departed), and in sounding their views.
So much is plain, that ('Abd ar-Rahman excepted) 'Omar saw no one amongst them endowed with sufficient power and influence to hold the reins of government; none, at least, so prominent as to take the acknowledged lead.
http://www.bible.ca/islam/library/Muir/Caliphate/chap27.htm   (1913 words)

  
 Chronica Prophetica
Abd ar-Rahman ibn Abd Allah ruled 1 year, 10 months.
Abd ar-Rahman ibn Abd Allah ruled 1 month.
Muawiya bore Abd ar-Rahman [I of Andalus], Abd ar-Rahman bore Hisham, Hisham bore al-Hakam, Al-Hakam bore Abd ar-Rahman [II].
http://www.history.pomona.edu/kbw/h100y/prophchr.htm   (2537 words)

  
 Upto11.net - Wikipedia Article for Khazars
The first war was fought in the early 650 and ended with the defeat of an Arab force led by Abd ar-Rahman ibn Rabiah outside the Khazar town of Balanjar, after a battle in which both sides used siege engines on the others' troops.
Arab armies led first by the Arab prince Maslamah ibn Abd al-Malik and then by Marwan ibn Muhammad (later Caliph Marwan II) poured across the Caucasus and eventually (in 737) defeated a Khazar army led by Hazer Tarkhan, briefly occupying Atil itself and possibly forcing the Khagan to convert to Islam.
Abraham ibn Daud, a twelfth-century Spanish rabbi, reported meeting Khazar rabbinical students in Toledo, and that they informed him that the "remnant of them is of the rabbinic faith." This reference indicates that some Khazars maintained ethnic, if not political, autonomy at least two centuries after the sack of Atil.
http://www.upto11.net/generic_wiki.php?q=khazars   (2537 words)

  
 Prosecuting the New York Sheikh
`Abd ar-Rahman speculated that the informant who had betrayed Abu Halima was Siddiq Ibrahim Siddiq `Ali, a Sudanese national on whom Abu Halima had relied on for assistance in reckoning explosives prior to the Trade Center bombing.
In fact, Abu Halima had been compromised by another `Abd ar-Rahman associate, `Abdu Muhammad Hajjaj, who had informed Egyptian authorities that Abu Halima was in Cairo (having fled there after the bombing).
Jihad against God’s enemies for God’s cause and His word.”[7] The author of an indignant and often logorrheic tome on jihad titled A Word of Truth,[8] `Abd ar-Rahman deems a perversion the modern revisionist efforts to cast that Islamic obligation as a peaceful striving for spiritual betterment.
http://www.ict.org.il/articles/articledet.cfm?articleid=95   (4309 words)

  
 St. Pelagius of Cordova
He lived in the days of Abd-ar-Rahman III, the most notable of the caliphs of Cordova.
http://www.stthomasirondequoit.com/SaintsAlive/id408.htm   (649 words)

  
 User:Briangotts - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Abd ar-Rahman ibn Rabiah, al-Djarrah ibn Abdullah, Babung, Book of Roads and Kingdoms, Crimean Goths, Gazaria, Georgios Kedrenos, ibn Khordadbeh, John of Gothia, Jomsvikings, Ketil Flatnose, Mangup Kale/Doros, Marada, Mardaites, Maslamah ibn Abd al-Malik, Ringarike, Sigurd Syr and Vagn Åkesson.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Briangotts   (649 words)

  
 Trust Islam -> Sahaba Stories
When Abd al-Muttalib died two years later, she went with the child to the house of his uncle Abu Talib and continued to look after his needs until he was grown up and married the lady Khadijah.
Abdullah ibn Masud attained such a knowledge of the Quran that he would say, "By Him besides Whom there is no god, no verse of the book of God has been revealed without my knowing where it was revealed and the circumstances of its revelation.
On one particular day, he met Utbah ibn Rabiah and his brother Shaybah, Amr ibn Hisham better known as Abu Jahl, Umayyah ibn Khalaf and Walid ibn Mughirah, the father of Khalid ibn Walid who was later to be known as Sayf Allah or 'the sword of God'.
http://www.trustislam.com/studiobb/index.php?showtopic=6153   (649 words)

  
 KHAZARS
Arab armies led first by the Arab prince Maslamah ibn Abd al-Malik and then by Marwan ibn Muhammad (later Caliph Marwan II) poured across the Caucasus and eventually (in 737) defeated a Khazar army led by Hazer Tarkhan, briefly occupying Atil itself and possibly forcing the Khagan to convert to Islam.
Abraham ibn Daud, a twelfth-century Spanish rabbi, reported meeting Khazar rabbinical students in Toledo, and that they informed him that the 'remnant of them is of the rabbinic faith.' This reference indicates that some Khazars maintained ethnic, if not political, autonomy at least two centuries after the sack of Atil.
Muslim sources report that the Khazar supreme court consisted of two Jews, two Christians, two Muslims, and a 'heathen' (whether this is a Turkic shaman or a priest of Slavic or Norse religion is unclear), and a citizen had the right to be judged according to the laws of his religion.
http://www.info-venezia.com/Khazars   (649 words)

  
 Muw6
'Abd ar-Rahman talked with him for a while, and then mentioned the matter to him, and Abu Hurayra said, 'I don't know anything about it.
He continued, "Then we went and visited Umm Salama, and 'Abd ar-Rahman asked her about the same matter and she said the same as 'A'isha had said.
One year he was doing i'tikaf and then, when it came to the night of the twenty-first, which was the night before the morning when he would normally have finished his i'tikaf, he said, 'Those who have done i'tikaf with me should continue doing i'tikaf for the last ten days.
http://bewley.virtualave.net/muw6.html   (6337 words)

  
 Khazars - Enpsychlopedia
Arab armies led first by the Arab prince Maslamah ibn Abd al-Malik and then by Marwan ibn Muhammad (later Caliph Marwan II) poured across the Caucasus and eventually (in 737) defeated a Khazar army led by Hazer Tarkhan, briefly occupying Atil itself and possibly forcing the Khagan to convert to Islam.
Abraham ibn Daud, a twelfth-century Spanish rabbi, reported meeting Khazar rabbinical students in Toledo, and that they informed him that the "remnant of them is of the rabbinic faith." This reference indicates that some Khazars maintained ethnic, if not political, autonomy at least two centuries after the sack of Atil.
Fadhlun the Kurd has been identified as al-Fadhl ibn Muhammad al-Shaddadi, who ruled Arran and other parts of Azerbaijan.
http://www.grohol.com/psypsych/Khazar   (6337 words)

  
 Damascus Breeze: Dedicated to Sh. Abdar Rahman ash Shaghouri  [ Modern Muslima.com ]
One of the Grand Sheikhs of this city, Abdur Rahman al Shagouri, though a bit weak from his old age, may Allah preserve him, whose Dimishq musk lingers on many students throughout the world, still heads his regular sessions glorifying Allah, Most High and singing salutations on the prophet and his family.
Here, one hears the cry of the other half of the creed, “Muhammad ar Rasul Allah.” While Mecca and Medina are mandates, Damascus is a desire, at least for those that come to know of its significance in the realm of all religions.
To visit Medina, where is encased the one concerned for all of the created, the prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, is demanded by the heart.
http://www.modernmuslima.com/damascus.htm   (2986 words)

  
 :: ESSENTIAL MAGAZINE.COM :: your online Marbella Lifestyle Magazine & Travel Guide
Second only to Baghdad within the Islamic world, Córdoba’s rise to fame began in 756, when Abd ar-Rahman I made it the capital of his emirate.
Under Abd ar-Rahman III, Cordoba was the largest city of the Mediterranean world, with over 300 mosques, 300 public baths, 50 hospitals, 80 public schools, 20 public libraries and 17 colleges.
On the whole, therefore, the period of Umayyad rule was characterised by prosperity, cultural and scientific sophistication, and religious tolerance, as the Muslims of this period tolerated all ‘people of the Book’.
http://www.essentialmagazine.com/index2.php?p=showarticle&id=9   (1195 words)

  
 Muw10
Ibn Shihab said, "That was mentioned to 'Amra bint 'Abd ar-Rahman, and she said that 'Urwa had spoken the truth and people had argued with 'A'isha about it, saying that Allah,the Blessed, the Exalted, says in His Book, 'Three quru'.' 'A'isha said, 'You spoken the truth.
1 Yahya related to me from Malik from 'Abdullah ibn Abi Bakr from 'Amra' bint 'Abd ar-Rahman that 'A'isha, Umm al-Muminin, informed her that the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, was with her and she heard the voice of a man asking permission to enter the room of Hafsa.
He said, 'When you have menstruated and are pure, then let me know.' She did not menstruate until 'Abd ar-Rahman ibn 'Awf was ill. When she was purified, she told him and he divorced her irrevocably or made a pronouncement of divorce which was all that he had left over her.
http://bewley.virtualave.net/muw10.html   (12400 words)

  
 Rustamid
In 757 (140 AH), a group of four Basra-educated missionaries (including Abd ar-Rahman ibn Rustam) proclaimed an Ibadi imamate, starting an abortive state led by Abul-Khattab Abdul-A'la ibn as-Samh which lasted until the Abbasids suppressed it in 761, and Abul-Khattab Abdul-A'la ibn as-Samh was killed.
http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/R/Rustamid.htm   (427 words)

  
 Abdul Rahman bin Faisal Al Saud
When Imam ‘Abd ar-Rahman, King ‘Abd al-‘Aziz's father, emerged as head of the Al Sa‘ud, he and his followers attacked Riyadh, recapturing it.
Abdul Rahman bin Faisal [Abd ar Rahman], struggled valiantly to resist foreign intrusion and restore peace and stability to his Kingdom.
The armistice was short-lived, however, and Imam ‘Abd ar-Rahman was forced to evacuate his family in 1891.
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/gulf/abdul-rahman-bin-faisal.htm   (680 words)

  
 929
January 16 - Emir Abd-ar-rahman III of Cordoba declares himself caliph (see ''Caliph of Cordoba'').
http://www.infothis.com/find/929   (222 words)

  
 Who Authored the Qur'an - By Abul Kasem
To verify Muhammad’s claim the Quraysh sent a delegation to Medina Jews, as they thought that Ar-Rahman, truly, was a deity in Yemen or Yamamah.
Labid was the son of Rabiah ibn Jafar al-Amiri.
Ubaydullah was the grandson of Abd al-Muttalib and Uthman b.
http://www.vinnomot.com/AKasem/KoranAuthor.htm   (222 words)

  
 Infoplease Search: al-bayyati abd al-wahhab
Abd ar-Rahman III, emir and caliph of Córdoba
(Encyclopedia) Abd ar-Rahman, 1778–1859, sultan of Morocco (1822–59).
(Encyclopedia) Faisal ibn Abd al-Aziz ibn Saud, 1905–75, king of Saudi Arabia (1964–75), son of Ibn...
http://www.infoplease.com/search.php3?query=al-Bayyati+Abd+al-Wahhab   (145 words)

  
 Ar rahman - CHEX
al-Qadir Abd al-Rahman Abd ar-Rahman, Muslim governor of Spain Abd ar-Rahman, sultan of Morocco Abd ar-Rahman I, emir of Córdoba Abd ar-Rahman
Bismillah ar-Rahmanar-Rahim Iqra Islamic Publications Welcome to Islam may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him Khulafa Ar-Rashideen: The Rightly guided Khalifas of Prophet Muhammad - Contents
Surah ArRahman "Bestow means for the nourishmentand pleasure.
http://www.standrewschurchexuma.com/straightening-irons/hai/ar-rahman.html   (295 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Abd ar-Rahman Khan (Central Asian History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
Abd ar-Rahman Khan[Ab´´dAr-rAmAn´ kAn, khAn] Pronunciation Key, 1844?–1901, emir of Afghanistan (1880–1901); grandson of Dost Muhammad.
You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Central Asian History, Biographies > Abd ar-Rahman Khan
AllRefer.com - Abd ar-Rahman Khan (Central Asian History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/A/AbdarRaKh.html   (167 words)

  
 Abd ar-Rahman II - Wikipedia, den fria encyklopedin
Abd ar-Rahman II efterträdde al-Hakam I och efterträddes av Muhammad I.
Abd ar-Rahman II var inte bara en djärv och framgångsrik krigare, han är även känd för sina ambitiösa byggnadprojekt i Córdoba.
Abd ar-Rahman II (född: 788, död: 852) var en umayyadisk emir i Córdoba från 822 till sin död.
http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abd_ar-Rahman_II   (141 words)

  
 Kalifat von Cordoba - netlexikon
| Sulaiman al-Mustain | Ali ibn Hammud al-Nasir | Abd ar-Rahman IV.
| al-Qasim al-Mamun | Yahya al-Mutali | Abd ar-Rahman V. Muhammad III.
Nachdem Abd ar-Rahman I. in Andalusien gelandet war und den Statthalter von Córdoba vertrieben hatte, gründete er das Emirat von Córdoba.
http://www.lexikon-definition.de/Kalifat-von-Cordoba.html   (687 words)

  
 Saudi Arabia Historical Setting - Flags, Maps, Economy, Geography, Climate, Natural Resources, Current Issues, International Agreements, Population, Social Statistics, Political System
ABD AL AZIZ ibn Abd ar Rahman Al Saud rose to prominence in the Arabian Peninsula in the early twentieth century.
Abd al Aziz ibn Abd ar Rahman Al Saud, founder of Saudi Arabia
During the mid-1920s, Abd al Aziz's armies had captured the Islamic shrine cities of Mecca and Medina.
http://workmall.com/wfb2001/saudi_arabia/saudi_arabia_history_historical_setting.html   (513 words)

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