- Al-
Nizamiyya of
Baghdad (Arabic: المدرسة النظامية), one of the
first nizamiyehs, was
established in 1065 in Baghdad. The
Nizamiyya School was considered...
-
elite class. Some
scholars have
suggested that the
establishment of the
Nizamiyya madrasas was in fact an
attempt to
thwart the
growing influence of another...
-
built the
Mustansiriya School, in an
attempt to
eclipse the Seljuq-era
Nizamiyya built by
Nizam al Mulk. In 1206,
Genghis Khan
established a
powerful dynasty...
- of
madrasas in
cities across the
Seljuk Empire which were
called the
Nizamiyyas after him. He also
wrote the
Siyasatnama (Book of Government), a political...
- the
Nizamiyya was part of it. This book was a
series of four
theological works that he
wrote during his
tenure as
professor of law at the
Nizamiyya. The...
- al-Mu'een
Jawharat al-Tawhid
Institutions Abi al-Hasan al-Ash'ari
Center Al-
Nizamiyya of
Baghdad Al-Azhar
University Al-Qarawiyyin
University Al-Zaytuna Mosque...
-
supported by the
Nizamiyya, the
modern historian Clifford Edmund Bosworth states that "this does not
necessarily imply that the
Nizamiyya had a collective...
- the Al-Karaouine (Fes, Morocco), Al-Azhar (Cairo, Egypt), and the Al-
Nizamiyya of Baghdad. In
terms of theory,
Arabic translation drew
heavily on earlier...
- al-Mu'een
Jawharat al-Tawhid
Institutions Abi al-Hasan al-Ash'ari
Center Al-
Nizamiyya of
Baghdad Al-Azhar
University Al-Qarawiyyin
University Al-Zaytuna Mosque...
- al-Mulk. Some
contemporary chroniclers refer to the
period as "al-dawla al-
Nizamiyya", the Nizam's state,
while modern scholars have
mentioned him as "the...