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| | Islamic History (Chronology) |
 | | Death of the Seljuk Sultan Malik Shah I1, accession of Muhammad II. |  | | The Buwayhid Sultan ud Daula is Overthrown by Musharaf ud Daula, Death of the Fatimid Caliph AI Hakim, accession of Al Zahir. |  | | In the Samudra Pasai empire, Death of Malik al Tahir I, accession of Malik al Tahir II. |
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http://www.barkati.net/english/chronology.htm
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| | Al |
 | | Al-Makrizi Taqi al-Din Ahmad ibn 'Ali ibn 'Abd al-Qadir ibn Muhammad al-Makrizi (or Maqrizi) (Shafi'ite with an inclina... |  | | Al-Amir Ibrahim 'Ali Didi al-Amir Ibrahim 'Ali Didi (born 19XX) was a 1957. |  | | Ibrahim Ahmad Abd al-Sattar Muhammad Ibrahim Ahmad Abd Al-Sattar Muhammad Al-Tikriti was the chief of staff of the Sadda... |
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http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/topics/al.html
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| | Khalid ibn al-Walid - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Three months after Khalid's arrival at Medina, Muhammad had sent an envoy to the Ghassan 2 Chieftain of Busra, with a letter asking the chieftain to convert to Islam. |  | | Upon conversion, he went to Muhammad personally and apologized for his previous actions, asked Muhammad to pray to God to forgive Khālid, and agreed to fight for Islam from then on. |  | | Khālid bin Walīd was born around 584 in Mecca to Walīd ibn Mughīrah, the chief of the Banū Makhzum clan of the Quraish, a clan which specialized in warfare. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khalid_ibn_al-Walid
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| | The tragedy of KarbalaI I |
 | | Therefore, al Walid sent in the night for al Husayn, peace be on him, and summoned him (to attend). |  | | Al Husayn, peace be upon him, went to al Walid, and Marwan b. |  | | Abd Allah al Saluli, and Abd Allah and Abd al Rahman, sons of Shaddad al Arhabi. |
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http://home.swipnet.se/islam/articles/The-tragedy-of-KarbalaI-I.htm
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| | Naharnet Newsdesk - Hariri-Al Walid Premiership Skirmish, How Serious? |
 | | Al Walid used the occasion to put out an explanation through his press office, saying he asked no one to convey his greetings to Hariri. |  | | It was then that demonstrations against Al Walid were staged around Mufti Rashid Kabbani's headquarters in Aisha Bakkar, which were followed by a counterattack of denunciations from Al Walid's camp, Mansour recalled. |  | | "But this relationship was strained more than a month ago, when a skirmish by proxy broke out following a ceremony at the Baabda palace in which President Lahoud conferred a medal of honor on Al Walid for his contributions to the Lebanese economy," Mansour noted. |
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http://www.naharnet.com/domino/tn/Newsdesk.nsf/Story/DD8859BC93588BE942256BC8004A0216?OpenDocument&PRINT
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| | Khaled Bin al Walid |
 | | Although he fought against the prophet at Uhud (625), Khalid was later converted (627/629) and joined Muhammad in the conquest of Mecca in 629; thereafter he commanded a number of conquests and missions in the Arabian Peninsula. |  | | One of the two Muslim leaders (With Amr Bin al-'As) of the enormously successful Islamic expansion under Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) and his immediate successors, Abu Bakr and Omar. |
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http://www.damascus-online.com/se/bio/khaled_bin_al_walid.htm
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| | al-Walid II Ibn Ziyad |
 | | In the name of Allah, This Dirham was struck in Wasit in the year Six and Twenty and One Hundred (126AH) [al-Walid II] |
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http://islamiccoins.ancients.info/umayyads/alwalidii.htm
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| | Currency of Bahrain |
 | | A coin (no. 34) was struck by Constans II (20-48 H /641-668 AD), who reigned during the Caliphates of 'Uthman, 'Ali and Mu'awiya. |  | | Other dirhams shown here were struck by al-Mahdi as Caliph (158-169 H/775-785 AD) at his palace in Baghdad, Qasr al-Salam, in 167 H (no. 62) and Harun as heir to his father al-Mahdi at Harunabad in Armenia in 169 H (no. 63). |  | | The coin of Justin II (no. 31) was struck during the childhood of the Prophet, and that of Focas (602-610 AD) (no. 32) in his early years as a religious reformer. |
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http://www.bahrain.gov.bh/english/bahrain/books/currency/chap03.asp
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| | Jihad, the Arab Conquests and the Position of Non-Muslim Subjects |
 | | In 704_705, the caliph Walid I gathered together the nobles of Armenia in the church of St. Gregory in Naxcawan and the church of Xram on the Araxis, and burned them to death. |  | | The episode of al Hakim [an absolute religious fanatic] must be regarded as the freak of a mad man, not typical of Islam. |  | | For instance, under al Mamun in the 9th century the pagans of Harran had to choose between Islam and death. |
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http://www.secularislam.org/jihad/subjects.htm
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| | Infallibles |
 | | In the year 114/732 he died, according to some Shi`ite traditions, he was poisioned by Ibrahim ibn al - Walid ibn `Abdillah, the nephew of Hisham, the Umayyad caliph. |  | | THE HOLY Imam Muhammad al - Baqir is the Fifth Apostolic Imam. |  | | Imam Muhammad ibn `Ali al - Baqir ( the word `baqir meaning he who cuts and dissects, a title given to him by the Prophet) was the son of the Fourth Imam and was born in 57/675. |
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http://www.al-shia.com/html/eng/ahl/ma-07_h.htm
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| | STUDIO VALENTINE FINE ARTS AND GRAPHIC DESIGN |
 | | When we search for the roots of the Moorish Orthodox Church, we find a tender soul, Walid al-Taha. |  | | , Magribine Press, Chicago, ©2000, which was taken from the original manuscript of Walid's poems provided by Sultan Sheikh Rafi Yahya Sharif Ali Shah Bey. |  | | Walid was born as Warren Tartaglia in Upstate New York. |
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http://www.studiovalentine.com/walid.html
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| | Islamic Medical Manuscripts, Medical Poetry 3 |
 | | ‘alá alfīyah ("Commentary on the Thousand [Verses]") is given in a rubricated heading on p. |  | | ‘alá alfīyah ("Commentary on the Thousand [Verses]"), a reference to the number of verses in the poem by Ibn Sīnā (although the poem usually contains 1326 verses). |  | | 9605; see Muhammad al-‘Arbi al-Khattabi, Faharis al-Khizanah al-Malikiyyah, II: al-tibb wa-al-saydala wa-al-baytarah wa-al-hayawan wa-al-nabat (Rabat: Mataba‘at al-Najah al-Jadidah, 1982) p. |
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http://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/arabic/poetry_3.html
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| | THE SHIA: THE REAL FOLLOWERS OF THE SUNNAH 210 - 229 |
 | | He is Khalid ibn al-Walid ibn al-Mugh i rah, from Banu Makkzum, who is called by Ahl al-Sunnah sayf Allah (God's Sword). |  | | Thereat Khalid assaied them, perpetrating the ugiest crimes till he aroused 'Umar's resentment, urging him --desoite his affinity and closeness to him-- to say to Abu Bakr said to 'Umar: ''Khalid is one of God's swords, unsheathed by Him against His enemies, he has interpreted and mistaken'', (hence he was given gies title). |  | | Undoubtedly he used to accuse 'Ali ibn Abi Talib with killing 'Uthman, the fact we get from his hadith in the Kufah Mosque, and his saying that 'Ali has made a hadith in al-Madinah, cursing him by the tongue of the Prophet, angles and all the people. |
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http://www.rafed.net/books/other-lang/the-shia/16.html
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| | Al-Muraja'at |
 | | In Muslim's @a<í<, it is narrated by `Abdul-Raal-Qásim ibn Mukhaymarah, Abu @áli<, Tharr ibn `Abdulláh, Sa`íd ibn `Abdul-Raal-Jazzár, Náfi` (a slave of Ibn `Umer), `A>á' ibn Abu Rabá<, `Imárah ibn `Umayr, `Arrák ibn Málik, al-Sha`bi, Maymún ibn Mahrán, al-\asan al-`Arni, Mu#`ab ibn Sa`d and `Ali ibn al-\usayn. |  | | Both #a<í< s quote his Al-Mízán from Sulaymán ibn Bilál and `Ali ibn Mushír. |  | | His <ádíth is narrated in Bukhári's @a<í< by Musaddid, `Amr ibn `Ali, and, in some places, by Na#r ibn `Ali. |
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http://www.al-islam.org/murajaat/tl/16.htm
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| | Arabia |
 | | Abu Abd al-Malik Marwan II ibn Muhammad ibn Marwan...744-750 |  | | When he died, control over the political and religious forces he had unleashed was given to Successors (Al Khalifah). |  | | Abu'l al-A'azz 'Abdul 'Aziz al-Mutawakkil II 'Ala Allah...1479-1497 d. |
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http://www.hostkingdom.net/arabia.html
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| | Muslim Contributions to Science, Philosophy, and the Arts |
 | | Abu al-Hassan al Haitham (965-1039 AD) was one of the most eminent physicists, whose contribution to optics and the scientific method were great. |  | | Ibn Rushd was a rationalist and wrote about religion and philosophy. |  | | It is here we find many of the great scientists of Islam who literally left behind hundreds and thousands of books on the various branches of science. |
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http://www.jannah.org/articles/contrib.html
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| | Al-Serat |
 | | That knowledge was not confined to religious subjects only, and we shall mention in the next part of this article two examples of the contributions of this madrasa to other branches of knowledge. |  | | [8] Muhammad Ahmad al Buraq, Abu l Abbas as Saffah, as quoted in as Shia wal Hakimun, p. |  | | [21] Muhammad Husayn al Muzaffar, Tarikh ash Shia, Dar az Zahra, Beirut, 3 |
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http://www.al-shia.com/html/eng/books/history/scholarly-jihad-imams/scholarly-jihad-imams.html
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| | Timeline 600CE to 999CE |
 | | 802 In Cambodia Jayavarman II proclaimed himself a "universal monarch" in a ritual that united religion and politics and gave rise to the cult of the Devaraja (deified king). |  | | Loosely translated it means "recitation." "Whoever witnesses the crescent of the month, he must fast the month." (Koran, al Baqarah 2:185) Ramadan begins the day after the crescent of the new moon is sighted and confirmed by 2 witnesses. |  | | 813-833 Caliph al Ma’mun founded a school in Baghdad called the House of Wisdom. |
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http://timelines.ws/0600AD_999AD.HTML
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| | Arabia |
 | | Abul Walid Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan.................685-705 opposed by... |  | | 'Abd Allah ibn 'Abd al-'Aziz ibn 'Adwan al-'Alaiyan....1859 |  | | Abu'l Qassim Muhammad (the Prophet) ibn 'Abdallah al-Hashimi...622-632 |
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http://www.hostkingdom.net/arabia.html
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| | ummayyad.html |
 | | Ibrahim (son of Walid), A.H. Marwan II (son of Muhammad, son of Marwan), A.H. The Abbasids conquered Khorasan under the brothers Ibrahim and `Abu Abbas, and refused to acknowledge Marwan as Caliph. |  | | Mu`awiyah is a grandson of Abu Sufyan, who one the death of al-Hasan, took possession of the Caliphate. |  | | The latter was later defeated on the banks of Zab and fled to Egypt, where he was defeated and slain in A.H. The Abbasid dynasty followed. |
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http://answering-islam.org/Index/U/ummayyad.html
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| | Islam and Fragmentation, to 1200 CE |
 | | This was Walid II, who was to be accused of being a shallow bon vivant, a handsome man who neglected rule, who spent much of the state's money and pursued pleasures that included drink and debauchery at his desert retreats. |  | | In 1095, a Persian educator, Muhammad al Ghazali, went through a religious crisis and embraced Sufism. |  | | In 922, one well known exponent of pantheism, Hallaj of Baghdad, was arrested and, it is said, hanged from a cross, taken down and whipped, his hands and feet amputated, and then executed. |
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http://www.fsmitha.com/h3/h08is.htm
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| | Forced Conversion and Prophet Muhammad |
 | | Khalid and his sword were sent out to convert the remaining stragglers to the faith. |  | | It is also noteworthy to examine Ibn Hisham's statement that "they entered islam by force." Muhammad himself told them later: "Had you rejected islam, I would have beheaded you and cast your heads under your feet." This was an undisputed threat: Either they accepted islam or they would have been beheaded. |  | | Ibn Kathir says that Muhammad's followers met a man and asked him to become a muslim. |
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http://www.hraicjk.org/forced_conversion_and_prophet_muhammad.html
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| | Musaylimah - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | After Muhammad's death, he rose up against the new Caliph Abu Bakr and defeated the first two generals sent against him., before being defeated by Khalid ibn al-Walid. |  | | Muslims often call him by the epithet al-Kadhdhaab ("the liar") in accordance with their view of him as a false prophet. |  | | Ibn Habib al-Hanefi was the most formidable of the enemies of Islam who rose to threaten the existence of the new state. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosailima
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| | SHIITES AND SHIAISM, Shi'aism, Shia, Shias, Shî'ah, sheee, About Islam, Muslim, Quran, Religion, Allah, Muhammad, Islamic, God, Muslims, Moslem, Koran, Hadith, Jesus, Prophet, Muhammed, Muslim Women, Sunnah, Salvation, Bible, Jesus, Mary, Sects, Hindu |
 | | Besides Ibn Ishâq himself, it must also be taken into consideration that Muhammad ibn Humayd ar-Râzî, who appears in the isnâd as at-Tabarîs direct source, has come under severe criticism from the muhaddithîn. |  | | A study of the texts wherein reference is made to the story of the Mâlik ibn Nuwayrah reveals that not a single one of them is reported with an uninterrupted chain of narration that consists of reliable authorities. |  | | Ibn Hibbân has summed up their opinions of him in the words: "He narrates forged material from reliable narrators. |
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http://allaahuakbar.net/shiites/vicious_unscrupulous_propaganda_of_shiia.htm
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| | Grabar.Formation of Islamic |
 | | One of the most interesting acts of Ibn al Zubayr, the opponent of the Umayyads in Mekkah, was his rebuilding of the Ka'bah after its destruction during the first Umayyad siege (683), not as it had been built with the youthful Muhammad's participation, but differently. |  | | Many early religious traditionalists, including such great ones as Bukhari and Tabari, do not accept the identification of the masjid al aqsa with Jerusalem as the only possible one. |  | | According to a later well-known tradition he built it as the Prophet said it was in the time of Abraham. |
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http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/med/grabar2.html
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| | Science of Hadith |
 | | Muhammad `Ali ibn al-Qasim Al Shakur al-Ha'iri (died 1245/1829-30). |  | | Ahmad ibn Nasr says: "The Prophet in reply [to a question that he had put] said, 'Hold on to al-Shafi`i for he is from me and God is with him and his followers."' See Kazim Mudir Shanehchi `IIm al hadith, p. |  | | See Hafiz Nishaburi Hakim Abu `Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Abd Allah, Ma`rifat ulum al hadith, p. |
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http://www.al-shia.com/html/eng/books/al-tawhid/hadith-science/2.htm
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| | Prophet MUHAMMAD |
 | | Khalid Ibn Al-Walid, known as the Sword of Allah, who, before this, had been a bitter enemy of Islam and who commanded the Quraish cavalry at Uhud; and Amr Ibn Al' As, another important character and warrior, adopted the new faith. |  | | Khalid Ibn Al-Walid was one of the generals chosen for the expedition. |  | | Thus was fulfilled the prophecy embodied in the Surah Al Fath in the Quran. |
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http://anwary-islam.com/prophet-story/muh4.htm
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| | The Life of Muhammad The Prophet |
 | | Khalid ibn al-Walid was fleeing when he saw such an opportunity and, gathering a group and killing the few remaining defenders of the pass, launched a furious attack from the rear. |  | | This went on till Ka'ab ibn Malik saw the Prophet and shouted at the top of his voice that the Prophet was still alive. |  | | Talhah and Khalid instigated their tribe, Banu Asad, to attack Medina on the first of Muharram of 4 A.H. The Prophet dispatched a force of one hundred and fifty men to intercept them. |
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http://www.al-islam.org/lifeprophet/15.htm
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| | THE SHIA: THE REAL FOLLOWERS OF THE SUNNAH 210 - 229 |
 | | He is Khalid ibn al-Walid ibn al-Mugh i rah, from Banu Makkzum, who is called by Ahl al-Sunnah sayf Allah (God's Sword). |  | | Undoubtedly he used to accuse 'Ali ibn Abi Talib with killing 'Uthman, the fact we get from his hadith in the Kufah Mosque, and his saying that 'Ali has made a hadith in al-Madinah, cursing him by the tongue of the Prophet, angles and all the people. |  | | In the book al-Bidayah wa al-nihayah, by Ibn Kathir, it is reported that Yazid ibn Harun head Shu'bah say in Abu Hurayrah's regard, that he had been a fraudulent, and used to narrate from both Ka'b al-'Ahbar and the Messenger of Allah (S) without distinguishing between them. |
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http://www.rafed.net/books/other-lang/the-shia/16.html
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| | Khilafah.com - Presenting the Khilafah State Part V |
 | | Ibn Shihab wrote (to Ruzaiq) ordering him to lead the Jumma prayer and telling him that Salim told him that 'Abdullah bin 'Umar had said, "I heard Allah's Messenger saying, 'All of you are guardians and responsible for your wards and the things under your care. |  | | After Abu Bakr became the Khaleefah, he appointed Umar ibn al-Khattab to assistant him. |  | | So he (saw) appointed Ali Ibnu Abi Talib as judge over Yemen, and charged Muadh Ibn Jabal and Abu Mousa with Judiciary and Imarah over Yemen. |
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http://www.khilafah.com/home/category.php?DocumentID=11841&TagID=1
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