- Abū Ḥayyān Athīr ad-Dīn al-
Gharnāṭī (Arabic: أَبُو حَيَّان أَثِير ٱلدِّين ٱلْغَرْنَاطِيّ,
November 1256 – July 1344 CE / 654 - 745 AH),
whose full name...
-
Gharnati (Arabic: الغرناطي),
refers to an
Algerian variety of
Andalusian classical music originating in Tlemcen. Its name is
derived from the
Arabic name...
- Qur'an, aut****d by the
Andalusian Zahiri-Ash'ari
scholar Abu
Hayyan al-
Gharnati. It is
considered the most
significant source on
Quranic grammar (morphology...
- In Arabic, he
preferred to
translate this name as
Yuhanna al-Asad al-
Gharnati (literally
means John the Lion of Granada). It is
likely that Leo Afric****...
- Abu
Hamid al-
Gharnati (full name: Abu
Hamid Muhammad ibn Abd al-Rahman ibn
Sulayman ibn Rabi al-Māzinī al-Qaysi; c. 1080 – 1170) was an
Andalusian traveller...
- [citation needed] With the sole
example of
Medieval linguist Abu
Hayyan al-
Gharnati – who,
while a
scholar of the
Arabic language, was not
ethnically Arab...
-
buried in
Balkh is
Tuhfat al-Albab of the
Andalusian traveller Abu
Hamid al-
Gharnati (d. 1170). Abd al-Ghafur Lari
wrote that
Muhammad al-Baqir, the
fifth Shia...
- al-Jayyāb al-
Gharnāṭī (ابن الجياب الغرناطي); Abū al-Ḥasan ‘Alī b. Muḥammad b.
Suleiman b. ‘Alī b.
Suleiman b. Ḥ****ān al-Anṣārī al-
Gharnāṭī (ابو الحسن علي...
- al-samāʿ wa-l-madīḥ (السماع والمديح). In
Algeria there are
three styles: al-
Gharnāṭī (referring to Granada) in the West, al-ṣanʿa (الصنعة) in the
region around...
- al-Andalusī al-
Gharnātī, 1130–1155, pp. 82–83.
Engel 2001, p. 51.
Engel 2001, pp. 64–65. The
Travels of Abū Hāmid al-Andalusī al-
Gharnātī, 1130–1155, p...