- to
Islam and were emplo**** as
Pahlavi translators of the
Abbasid court.
Nawbakht was the most
prominent among 'Abbasid
caliph al-Mansur's
court astrologers...
-
variations include Nawbakht, Nūbukht, Nibakht,
Naybakht and Ibn
Nawbakht. Many
members of the
Nawbakht family, or clan (Banu
Nawbakht),
distinguished themselves...
-
different accounts of Abu Nuwas’s
death survive: 1. He was
poisoned by the
Nawbakht family,
having been
framed with a poem
satirizing them; 2. He died in a...
- and
justice of God and
human free will
affected Shia theologians. Bani
Nawbakht,
particularly Abu Sahl Al-Nawbakhti (d. 923–924),
fuzed Mu'tazili theology...
- that
Narjis was
given protection by a
member of the
powerful Shia
family Nawbakht]i. The tomb of
Narjis is
located in the al-Askari
shrine in Samarra, Iraq...
- al-Nawbakhti was the
nephew of the
theologian philosopher Abū Sahl ibn
Nawbakht.
Among his
fellow translators of
books of
philosophy were Abū 'Uthmān al-Dimashqi...
- were in the
service of the Abbasids, such as the Ibn al-Furat and Banu
Nawbakht families. Abu al-Qasim al-Husayn ibn Ruh al-Nawbakhti was a
close ****ociate...
-
University Press. p. 293. ISBN 9780521028875.
These Iranian astrologers include Nawbakht, Masha'allah b.
Athari al-Basri and Abu Hafs 'Umar b. al-Farrukhan al-Tabari...
- were in the
service of the Abbasids, such as the Ibn al-Furat and Banu
Nawbakht families.
Among other books about Islamic jurisprudence, Abu Ja'far wrote...
- may
count among the pro-Alid or Shi'i
families the Banū Furāt and Banū
Nawbakht. Al-Isfahani's
sources are al-Abbas b.
Ahmad b.
Thawaba and
Yahya b. Muhammad...