Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Governor of Fars. Background on Sindh. Early Muslim presence. Umayyad interest in Sindh. Conquest of valley of Sindh. Military and political strategy. Reasons for success. Administration of Sindh. Incorporation of ruling elite into administration. Clashes with the Jats. Religion. Death. Aftermath. Controversy. Legacy. See also. Notes. References.

    • Qa'im Al Muhammad

      In Shia Islam, Qāʾim Āl Muḥammad ( Arabic: قائم آل محمد,...

  2. Muhammad bin Qasim al-Thaqafi ( Arabic: محمد بن قاسم) was an Arab general of the Islamic Umayyad Caliphate who attacked the Sindh and Punjab regions along the Indus River (now a part of Pakistan ).

  3. Al-Qa'im rejected these overtures in a letter that reiterated the Fatimids' claims to universal dominion as the rightful heirs of Muhammad. A fragment of a long poem by al-Qa'im, exhorting the inhabitants of Fustat to emulate the Ifriqiyan example and follow the rightful Fatimid da'wa, also survives, via a copy sent to Baghdad.

  4. El título de al-Qa'im Āl Muhammad (en árabe: قائم آل محمد ‎, «el que se levanta, de la familia de Mahoma»), también al-Qāʾim bi ʾl-sayf («el que se levanta con la espada») o al-Qāʾim bi-amr Allāh («el que lleva a cabo la orden de Dios»), se le da a una figura mesiánica en la escatología del Islam chiita ...

    • Proyectos Wikimedia, Datos: Q1883451
  5. Bibliography. External links. Qasim ibn Muhammad. Qāsim ibn Muḥammad ( Arabic: القاسم بن محمد) was the eldest of the sons of Muhammad and Khadija bint Khuwaylid. He died in 601 CE (before the start of his father's prophethood in 609), after his third birthday, [1] and is buried in Jannat al-Mu'alla cemetery, Mecca.