Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sitt_al-ShamSitt al-Sham - Wikipedia

    Fatimah Khatun bint Najm ad-Dīn Abu al-Shukr Ayyub ibn Shādhi ibn Marwān (died 1220), popularly known as Sitt al-Sham, was a second sister of Saladin, probably older than Rabi'a Khatun. She is known for founding Al-Shamiyah al-Kubra Madrasa.

  2. Fatimah Khatun bint Najm ad-Dīn Abu al-Shukr Ayyub ibn Shādhi ibn Marwān (fallecida en 1220), conocida popularmente como Sitt al-Sham, era una segunda hermana de Saladino, probablemente mayor que Rabi'a Khatun. Es conocida por fundar Al-Shamiyah al-Kubra Madrasa. Nacida en Damasco, fue la esposa de Muhammad ibn Shirkuh de Homs.

  3. 31 de may. de 2017 · Along with Sitt al-Sham, the noblewomen of the Ayyubid era (known as khatuns) had great influence in education through building schools, sponsoring the sciences and launching educational endowments. Among the most prominent examples is Khatun Om Shams al-Muluk, who established the Khatuniyah school.

  4. La madrasa de al-Sahiba fue fundada por al-Sahiba Rabi'a Jatun, la hermana menor de Salah al-Din (Saladino) y Sitt al-Sham. Estaba dedicada al rito hanbali y se encontraba en el barrio al-Salihiyya, a los pies del monte Qasiyun.

  5. A grand madrasa complex built by the 'Lady of Damascus', Khatun Sitt al-Sham bint Ayyub. Its layout includes a free-standing minaret in a rectangular courtyard with a water-basin and an arcade in front of the entrance to the tomb chamber.

  6. Muhammad ibn Shirkuh married a sister of Saladin, who was thus his own first cousin, known as Sitt Ash-Sham (‘The Lady of Syria’, i.e. not her given name). Her full name was Sitt Ash-Sham Zumurrud Khatun bint Najm d-Din Ayyub.

  7. The Madrasa al-Sahiba was founded by al-Sahiba Rabi'a Khatun, the younger sister of both Salah al-Din (Saladin) and Sitt al-Sham. It was dedicated to the Hanbali rite and located in the Salihiyya Quarter at the foot of Mount Qasiyun.