-
Alawism (Arabic: علوية, romanized: ʿAlawiyya), also
known as
Nusayrism (Arabic: نصيرية, romanized: Nuṣayriyya), is an
offshoot of
early Shia
Islam with...
- Abu Shu'ayb
Muhammad ibn
Nusayr al-Numayri (died c. 883),
commonly known simply as Ibn
Nusayr, was an Arab
religious leader who is
considered the founder...
-
transmigration of souls. Halm 2001–2012. On Ibn
Nusayr, see
Friedman 2000–2010;
Steigerwald 2010. On Alawism-
Nusayrism in general, see Bar-Asher 2003; Bar-Asher...
- Musa ibn
Nusayr (Arabic: موسى بن نصير Mūsá bin
Nuṣayr; c. 640 – c. 716) was an Arab
general and
governor who
served under the
Umayyad caliph Al-Walid I...
-
attributed to him. Ibn
Nusayr (died
after 868) and al-Khasibi (died 969) were the two most
important figures in the
founding of
Nusayrism (called
Alawism in...
-
Tariq was
reinforced by an Arab
force led by his
superior wali Musa ibn
Nusayr and
continued northward. In 713, Theodemir, the
Visigothic count of Murcia...
- Abd al-Aziz ibn Musa ibn
Nusayr (Arabic: عبد العزيز بن موسى) was an Arab
general and the
first governor of Al-Andalus, in modern-day
Spain and Portugal...
- Shi'a Islam. Once a
common and
neutral term
derived from the name of Ibn
Nusayr, the sect's founder, it fell out of
favour within the
community in the early...
-
majority of
modern sources state that Ṭāriq was a
Berber mawla of Musa ibn
Nusayr, the
Umayyad governor of Ifriqiya.
According to Ibn Khaldun,
Tariq Ibn Ziyad...
-
Manichaeism Chinese Gnosticism Chinese Manichaeism Islamic Gnosticism Druze Nusayrism Modern Modern schools Scriptures List of
Gnostic texts Texts Nag Hammadi...