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Naqib al-ashraf (Arabic: نقيب الأشراف) (plural:
nuqaba or niqabat) was a
governmental post in
various Muslim empires denoting the head or
supervisor of...
- ("substitutes"),
seven abrār ("piously
devoted ones"), four awtād ("pillars")
three nuqabā ("leaders") and one qutb. The
second version is Ibn Arabī’s
which has a...
- ("substitutes"),
seven abrār ("piously
devoted ones"), four awtād ("pillars")
three nuqabā ("leaders") and one qutb. The
second version is from Ibn Arabī, who lived...
- Persian-speaking countries.
Notable examples of such a
Naqib (plural: "
Nuqaba") or Mirs (plural: "Miran"), were
Hazrat Ishaan in the
Mughal Empire and...
- ("substitutes"),
seven abrār ("piously
devoted ones"), four awtād ("pillars"),
three nuqabā ("leaders") and one qutb. All
these saints know one
another and
cannot act...
- version,
these twelve successors are
compared to the
twelve leaders (al-
nuqaba) of the Bani Isra'il. In
favor of its authenticity, the
Islamicist Hossein...
- of
allegiance to a
stipendiary by name
Shaikh Ali Mana, the Saqladi. The
Nuqaba of Mausatta, two of whom
share the
stipend granted to them by His Majesty's...
-
founder of the
celebrated theological Center of Najaf. He
served as "Naqīb al-
Nuqabā'"
after the
death of his brother.
Sayyid Murtaḍā was
deeply interested in...
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seluruhnya todak kurang dari 50 orang.113 (new para) Di
antara Naqib Al-
Nuqaba' (Naqib Kepala) yang
terkenal adalah Al-Aidrus Al-Akbar (w. 1460), Ahmad...
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mainly in pre-1948 Palestine.
Traditionalist Arab/Levantine
genealogists (
nuqaba’
Sayda wa Dimashq) who
established the family-tree
noted that the El-Bizri...