- of Abbasah, the
sister of Al-Rashid. She
caught the
fancy of
Ibrahim al-
Mausili,
whose songs in
praise of her soon
reached Harun's attention, who bought...
- in the
public domain: Thatcher,
Griffithes Wheeler (1911). "Ibrahīm Al-
Mauṣilī". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 14 (11th ed.)...
- [Breviary
according to the rite of the
Antiochene Syrian Church] (in Latin).
Mausili:
Typis Fratrum Prædicatorum. OCLC 819373843. Slapak, Orpa, ed. (1995)....
- Burd (714–784)
Khalil ibn
Ahmad (718–791) Al-Asma'i (740–828)
Ibrahim Al-
Mausili (742-804) Abu-l-'Atahiya (748–828)
Abbas Ibn al-Ahnaf (750–809) (عباس بن...
- 727–32 Uqba ibn
Qudama (temporary), 732–734
Ubayd Allah ibn al-Habhab al-
Mausili, 734–41. (Berber
Revolt begins 740)
Kulthum ibn Iyad al-Qushayri, 741 Balj...
-
Giacomo Adria. Mawṣilī, Ilyās (1992). Van Leeuwen,
Richard (ed.).
Iljaas al-
Mausili: een
Arabier in Zuid-Amerika, 1675–1683 (in Dutch). Amsterdam:
Middle East...
- الرفاء) or Abul-Hasan al-Sari ibn
Ahmed ibn al-Sari al-Kindi al-Raffa al-
Mausili (Arabic: أبو الحسن السري بن أحمد بن السري الكندي الرفاء الموصلي) (died...
- from York,
Northumbria Lu Yu (born 733), the "Sage of Tea"
Ibrahim Al-
Mausili (born 742),
Persian singer and poet 809:
Abbas Ibn al-Ahnaf (born 750)...
-
Nathan of
Cento translated into
Hebrew an
Arabic work by 'Ammar ibn Ali al-
Mauṣili, on the cure of
diseases of the eye. Gajo was held in
great esteem by the...
- the man who
ordered them
built – as one
Muhammad b. 'Urwa b.
Sayyar al-
Mausili, but the
inscriptions also say they were
built "by the
benevolence of"...