Search
Your search for 'dc_creator:( "Muminov, Ashirbek" ) OR dc_contributor:( "Muminov, Ashirbek" )' returned 2 results. Modify search
Did you mean: dc_creator:( "muminov, ashirbek" ) OR dc_contributor:( "muminov, ashirbek" )Sort Results by Relevance | Newest titles first | Oldest titles first
Arslān-bāb
(669 words)
Arslān-bāb was, according to local traditions, the teacher of Khwāja Aḥmad al-Yasawī (d. 562/1166–7), the legendary founder of the Yasawiyya Ṣūfī brotherhood in Central Asia. He is usually claimed to have been an exceptionally long-lived companion of the prophet Muḥammad, under the name of either Salmān al-Fārisī or Muḥammad b. Nisṭūr al-Rūmī; in modern
khwāja genealogies, he appears as a close relative of Aḥmad al-Yasawī himself (
khwājas are the masters of Central Asian kinship groups that are regarded as familial communities distinguished by genealogically-m…
Source:
Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE
Date:
2021-07-19
Allāh-Naẓar
(498 words)
Allāh-Naẓar Khwūsh Naẓar uly (d. 1991) was a Ḥanafī scholar, an
ākhūnd (teacher of higher Islamic learning), and a Ṣūfī of the Naqshbandiyya-Mujaddidiyya brotherhood. He was born between 1904 and 1907, near Naupyr (Nawpīr), on the lower Amu Darya, in Qaraqalpaqstan (Qāraqalbāqistān), in present-day Uzbekistan, and was known locally as Allāh-Naẓar Qos Nazarov. (The Naqshbandiyya was founded in Bukhārā, by Bahāʾ al-Dīn Naqshband, d. 791/1389, and is now widespread; its Mujaddidī current was initiated by the …
Source:
Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE
Date:
2021-07-19