-
Muhammad Bairam Khan (Persian: محمد بیرم خان; 18
January 1501 – 31
January 1561),
commonly known as
Bairam Khan or
Bayram Khan was an
important military...
- word "Bayram",
using the term "Lesser
Bairam" to
refer to
their own Eid al-Fitr celebrations; "
Greater Bairam"
refers to Eid al Adha.
State holidays...
-
three main
Muslim holidays: Ramadan, Eid ul-Fitr (Lesser
Bairam), and Eid ul-Adha (
Greater Bairam).
Ramadan is the
ninth month of the
Islamic year, during...
-
established a base with a
depot for
supplies and stores. On 7
August the
Greater Bairam (a
feast day
celebrating the end of the
Islamic year)
coincided with...
- from 1556 to 1605.
Akbar succeeded his father, Humayun,
under a regent,
Bairam Khan, who
helped the
young emperor expand and
consolidate Mughal domains...
-
could have gone on
drinking for ever." On 6 August, the eve of the
Greater Bairam (celebrating the end of the
Islamic year) the
Egyptian Camel Transport...
- the
leadership of
Bairam Khan, a wise move
given Humayun's
record of
military ineptitude, and it
turned out to be
prescient as
Bairam proved himself a...
-
period and most of them were
southern Albanians (Tosks). Koca
Sinan Pasha Bairam Khan was the
Grand Vizier of the
Mughal Empire, who led the
forces of Akbar...
- as the
Tashreeq days. Eid al-Adha is also
sometimes called Eid II or "
Greater Eid" (Arabic: العيد الكبير, romanized: al-ʿĪd al-Kabīr). As with Eid al-Fitr...
-
attributed to
Kamran Mirza is
written in
Persian and Chagatai, and one of
Bairam Khan's
Divans was
written in Chagatai. The
following is a
prime example...