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Topic: Jafar ibn Mohammad


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  Jafar ibn Mohammad. Who is Jafar ibn Mohammad? What is Jafar ibn Mohammad? Where is Jafar ibn Mohammad? Definition of ...
Imam Jafar As-Sadiq (April 20, 702 - December 4, 765) was the sixth Shia imam, and a theologian and jurist.
Jafar was known for his liberal views on learning, and was keen to debate with scholars of different faiths and of different beliefs.
Despite Jafar's abstainment from politics, he was often harassed by the new Abbasid rulers and he was even imprisoned a few times.
www.knowledgerush.com /kr/encyclopedia/Jafar_ibn_Mohammad   (475 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Jafar ibn Mohammad   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Jafar Sadiq or Jafar Al Saddiq (pronounced Jafar As Saddiq) was born as Jafar Ibn Muhammad in Medina on April 20, 702.
Jafar was considered by the Shia to be the 6th Shia Imam, as he was the son of Muhammad al-Baqir (the 5th shia Imam), grandson of Zainul Abideen (4th Shia Imam) and thus the Prophet.
Jafar, himself is to have considered himself the 5th Imam although he is noted to have emphasised the Imam as the leader of the spiritual realm rather than the physical.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Jafar-ibn-Mohammad   (880 words)

  
 Personalities Noble   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Abu Muhammad Abdallah Ibn Ahmad Ibn al-Baitar Dhiya al-Din al-Malaqi was one of the greatest scientists of Muslim Spain and was the greatest botanist and pharmacist of the Middle Ages.
Ala-al-Din Abu al-Hasan Ali Ibn Abi al-Hazm al-Qarshi al-Damashqi al-Misri was born in 607 A.H. of Damascus.
Abul Qasim Khalaf ibn al-Abbas al-Zahravi (known in the west as Abulcasis) was born in 936 A.D. in Zahra in the neighborhood of Cordova.
jamil.com /personalities   (15221 words)

  
 The Great Personalities Buried In The Holy City of Mashhad || Imam Reza (A.S.) Network
Mohammad ibn Hasan ibn Ali ibn Mohammad ibn al-Husain Hur Ameli, was the famous Shi'ite theologian and traditionist.
Amin al-Islam Abu Ali Fazl ibn Hasan al-Tabarsi, the great Shi'ite commentator of the Holy Qur'an expired in the year 548 A.H./1153 A.D., in Sabzewar and was buried in Bagh-i Rezwan, the cemetery situated between the Bast Shaykh Toosi and Bast Shaykh Tabarsi, at the entrance of the holy shrine of Imam Reza (A.S.).
Sultan ibn Mohammad ibn Hamzah ibn Imam Musa al-Kazim (A.S.) was martyred in 199 A.H./ 814 A.D. He is buried under a dome in the holy city of Mashhad known as Gonbad Kheshti, which is situated in one of the streets in the east of Shaykh Tabarsi Avenue.
www.imamreza.net /eng/imamreza.php?id=1092   (1438 words)

  
 MUSLIM PROFILES - IslamOnline.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Safiyah Bint Huyeiy Ibn Akhtab was one of the wives of Prophet Mohamed (PBUH).
Abul Wafa Muhammad Ibn Muhammad Ibn Yahya Ibn Ismail al-Buzjani was born in Buzjan, Nishapur in 940 A.D. Ibn Al Nafis
Ibn Zuhr, known in the West as Avenzoar, was one of the most prominent physicians, clinicians and parasitologist of the Middle Ages.
www.islamonline.com /cgi-bin/news_service/profiles.asp   (775 words)

  
 AMSE. International : About us   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Abu Raihan Mohammad Ibn Ahmad al-Biruni was one of the well-known figures associated with the court of King Mahmood Ghaznawi, who was one of the famous Muslim kings of the 11th century A.D. Al-Biruni was a versatile scholar and scientist who had equal facility in physics, metaphysics, mathematics, geography and history.
Jalal al-Din Mohammad Ibn Mohammad Ibn Mohammad Ibn Husain al-Rumi was born in 604 A.H. (1207/8 A.D.) at Balkh, Afghanistan.
Ibn Battuta's contribution to geography is unquestionably as great as that of any geographer, yet the accounts of his travels are not easily accessible except to the specialist.
www.amse.net /discoveries_WorkofMuslimScientists.html   (11849 words)

  
 Islamic History and Culture - Companions to Prophet Muhammad - Jafar ibn Abi Talib   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Jafar stayed with his uncle, al-Abbas, until he was a young man. Then he married Asma bint Umays, a sister of Maymunah who was later to become a wife of the Prophet.
Jafar eventually went to the Prophet, peace be upon him, and sought permission for himself and a small group of the Sahabah, including his wife, to make hijrah to the land of Abyssinia.
Jafar ibn Abi Talib then advanced and made a speech that was moving and eloquent and which is still one of the most compelling descriptions of Islam.
islamic-paths.org /Home/English/History/Companions/Content/Talib.htm   (2721 words)

  
 Legacy of Islam - Muslim Contributors to Science and Technology
Known in the West as Alhazen, Ibn aI-Hautham was born in 965 A. in Basrah, and was educated in Basrah and Baghdad.
ABUL HASAN ALI AZ-MASU'DI Abul Hasan Ali Ibn Husain Ibn Ali AL-Masu'di was a descendant of Abdallah Ibn Masu'd, a companion of the Holy Prophet (peace be upon him).
Abu Jafar Muhammad Ibn Muhammad Ibn al-Hasan Nasir al-Din al-Tusi was born in Tus, Khurasan, (now Iran) in 1201 A.D. Al-Tusi was appointed astrologer for the State by Isma'ili governor Nasir ad-Din 'Abd ar-Rahim.
www.amaana.org /ISWEB/contents.htm   (15397 words)

  
 Jafar Sadiq   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Imam Jafar As-Sadiq (April 20, 702 – December 4, 765), in full Jafar ibn Muhammad ibn Ali ibn Husayn, was the sixth Shia imam, and a theologian and jurist.
Jafar's AS father would die in 743As the son of two prominent Imams, and descendants of Muhammad PBUH, he would become well versed in Islamic sciences including Hadith, Sunnah, and the Qur'an.
Jafar AS, is noted to have emphasised the Imam as the leader of the spiritual realm rather than the physical.
www.omniknow.com /common/wiki.php?in=en&term=Jafar_ibn_Mohammad   (1173 words)

  
 Imam Jafar ibn Mohammad (A.S.) (al-Sadiq)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
As an example, 'Ali ibn Musa ar-Rida (the Eighth Imam) said, in the course of a hadith, "The Imam after me is my son, Muhammad, and after him his son 'Ali, and after 'Ali his son, Hasan, and after Hasan his son Hujjatu'l- Qa'im, who is awaited during his occultation and obeyed during his manifestation.
Ibn Abi Dalaf says: "I heard from Hazrat 'Ali ibn Muhammad (the 10th Imam) that he said: 'The Imam after me will be Hasan, my son, and after him his descendent the Qa'im, who will fill the earth with justice, when it was previously filled with injustice.
I was guided to the true way, whereby after the Imamate of Ja'far ibn Muhammad had been proved to me by evidence and demonstration, I said one day to him: 'O son of the Prophet of Allah, tell me some hadiths from your forefathers about occultation and the truth of it.
www.al-shia.com /html/eng/books/history/ahlulbayt/c3-15.html   (5425 words)

  
 IMAM JAfar Ibn Mohammad   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Imam Ja'far ibn Muhammad Al-Sadiq, the son of the fifth Imam, was born in 83/702.
The Imam took advantage of the occasion to propagate the religious sciences until the very end of his Imamate, which was contemporary with the end of the Umayad, and beginning of the Abbasid caliphates.
He instructed many scholars in different fields of the intellectual and transmitted sciences, such as Zararah, Muhammad ibn Muslim, Mu'min Taqi, Hisham ibn Hakam, Aban ibn Taghlib, Hisham ibn Salim, Hurayz, Hisham Kalbi Nassabah, and Jabir ibn Hayyan, the alchemist.
www.irna.ir /ahlbayt/sadegh/esadegh.htm   (643 words)

  
 [No title]
Ali, peace be on them, (including) who his mother was, the date of his birth, evidence for his Imamate, his age, the period of his succession (to the Imamate), the time of his death, the place of his grave, the number of his children, and a brief outline of the reports about him.
Ja'far, peace be on him, went to him while he was pulling at his cloak.
Ibn Abi al-Awja', Ibn Talut, Ibn al-Ama and Ibn al-Muqaffa with a group of Zindiqs were gathered in the Sacred Mosque during the season of the pilgrimage.
www.14sayings.8m.com /m8.htm   (7269 words)

  
 Bilal Ibn Rabah   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Bilal Ibn Rabah, on of Prophet Mohammad’s (PBUH) companions, and one of the greatest figures in the history of Islam.
Umayyah ibn Khalaf used to force Bilal (after embracing Islam) to go outside in the morning of a very hot day wearing a suit of armor where he would then throw him face down in the sand and leave him to bake in the sun.
When Umar Ibn Al Khattab, another companion of the Prophet (PBUH), heard the adhan he rushed to the Prophet and said; "By the One Who has sent you with the Truth I had the same dream about it!" "Revelation has already preceded you," replied the Prophet, (PBUH).
islamonline.com /cgi-bin/news_service/profile_story.asp?service_id=756   (972 words)

  
 Jafar Ibn Abi Talib
Jafar is the son of Abu Talib, the uncle of Prophet Mohamed (PBUH), and his uncle Al- Abaas was the one who raised him, for his father was a very poor man and had to support a big family.
So he asked the group Muslims, among which was Jafar Ibn Abi Talib, to come and meet him and the Muslims chose Jafar to be their spokesman.
Jafar answered him saying “we were living in darkness and this religion came and commanded us to speak the truth, to honor our promises, to be kind to our relations, to cease all forbidden acts, to abstain from bloodshed.
islamonline.com /cgi-bin/news_service/profile_story.asp?service_id=889   (1088 words)

  
 Imam Mohammed Mahdi (A.S)
Abu Jafar (al-Baqir), peace be on him, said: "Two signs will come before the one who will arise (al-qa'im), peace be on him: there will be an eclipse of the sun in the middle of the month of Ramadan and an eclipse of the moon at the end of it."
(Jafar al-Sadiq) said: "Before (the coming of) the one who will rise (al-qa'im), peace be on him, there will be a year of abundant rain in which the fruits and the dates on the palms will be destroyed.
(Mundhir al-Jawzi) said: I heard (Ja'far al-Sadiq) say: "Before the coming of the one who will rise (al-qa'im), peace be on him, the people will be chided for their acts of disobedience by a fire which will appear in the sky and a redness which will cover the sky.
www.14sayings.8m.com /m14.htm   (3288 words)

  
 Imam Ja'far ibn Muhammad (A.S.)
Imam Ja'far as-Sadiq was brought up by his grand- father, Imam Zaynu 'I-'Abidm in Medina for twelve years and then remained under the sacred patronage of his father Imam Muhammad al-Baqir for a period of nine- teen years.
Jabir ibn Hayyan at.-Tusi, a famous scholar of mathematics, was one of the Imam's disciples who benefited from the Imam's knowledge and guidance and was able to write four hundred books on different subjects.
Imam Ja'far ibn Muhammad, the son of the Fifth Imam, was born in 83/702.
www.hadith.net /english/ahl-al-bayt/emam-6.htm   (1779 words)

  
 Al Sayeda Khadijah Bint Khuwaylid   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Abdullah ibn Jafar narrated that he heard Sayyiduna Ali say in Kufa that Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) said, "The best of the women of her time was Maryam, daughter of Imran, and the best of the women of her time was Khadijah, daughter of Khuwaylid."
At the time of the marriage, Prophet Mohammad was twenty-five years old, while Khadijah was forty years old, yet this never affected their marriage, on the contrary, he was the best of husbands.
Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) as a little more relaxed, Khadijah took him to see her cousin, Waraqa Ibn Nawfal, for he was a man of knowledge, and she was sure that he would be able to explain the meaning of what had just happened to her beloved husband.
www.islamonline.com /cgi-bin/news_service/profile_story.asp?service_id=651   (917 words)

  
 JAFARIYANEWS, Imam Jafar-e-Sadiq (AS)
Imam Ja'far as-Sadiq was brought up by his grand father, Imam Zaynu'l Abidin in Madina for 12 years and then remained under the sacred patronage of his father Imam Muhammad al-Baqir for a period of nineteen years.
After the death of his holy father in 114 A.H., he succeeded him as the Sixth Imam, and thus the sacred trust of Islamic mission and spiritual guidance was relayed down to his custody right from the Holy Prophet through the succession of the preceding Imams.
It was amidst such deadly gloom that virtuous personage of Imam Ja'far as Sadiq stood like a beacon of light shedding its lustre to illuminate the ocean sinful darkness around.
www.jafariyanews.com /may2k2/27MaySadiq.htm   (940 words)

  
 Response to Grammatical errors in the Qur'an
Abu Jafar goes on to quote pre-Islamic Arabic poetry with a similar structure (a nominative used after a participle normally requiring the accusative) but it would be lengthy to quote and explain.
According to Ibn Jafar, Sibawaiy indicates that the verb 'akun is CORRECTLY in the JUSSIVE (al-muDaari2 al-majzoom) due to one of two reasons, as follows.
Ali ibn Sulaiman disagrees with this opinion, noting that in that case it should be in the accusative (manSoob) "qareeban"as in << inna zaidan qareeban mink >> "Zaid is close to you".
www.answering-christianity.com /quran/grammar2.htm   (6682 words)

  
 The Cyber Murid: History of Ismaili's   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
, Ja'far as-Sadiq Imam Jafar As-Sadiq (April 20, 702 December 4, 765), in full Jafar ibn Muhammad ibn Zayn ibn Husayn, was the sixth Shia imam, and a theologian and jurist.
The Ismailis became those who accepted Ja'far Imam Jafar As-Sadiq (April 20, 702 December 4, 765), in full Jafar ibn Muhammad ibn Zayn ibn Husayn, was the sixth Shia imam, and a theologian and jurist.
His father was Jafar as Sadiq, the sixth Shia Imam, and his mother was a Berber slave named Hamida.
www.cybermurid.com /ubbthreads/showflat.php?Cat=&Board=edu&Number=39735&Main=39735#Post39735   (3128 words)

  
 Timeline 600CE to 999CE
Mohammad in this year dreamed of being transported from Mecca to the Rock of Mariah in Jerusalem, from which he ascended into heaven and received instructions from God for himself and his followers.
Ali was Mohammad’s son-in-law and the father of Mohammad’s grandsons.
980-1037 Avicenna (Ibn Sina, Afghan scientist), the Muslim philosopher-scientist, was born in Bukhara (Balkh).
timelines.ws /0600AD_999AD.HTML   (10742 words)

  
 Mohammad Abaee-Khorasani   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Ayatollah Mohammad Va'ez Abaee-Khorasani (محمد عبایی خراسانی)‎ (1940?-October 13, 2004) was an Iranian cleric and reformist politician.
Abaee-Khorasani moved to Qom again as the head of Mohammad Khatami's presidential campaign office in the city of Qom.
On October 16, he was buried in Qom, near the shrine of Fatima bint Musa ibn Jafar, the daughter of seventh Shia Imam.
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/M/Mohammad-Abaee-Khorasani.htm   (549 words)

  
 Iranian Personalities: Khajeh Nasir-o-Din Tousi
bu Jafar Mohammad Ibn Mohammad Ibn Hassan Nasir-o-Din Tousi (or known as Khajeh Nasir-o-Din Tousi) was born in Tous, Khorasan province of Iran in 1201 A.D. and died in 1274 A.D in Kazemain (in today Iraq).
He learnt sciences and philosophy from Kamal-o-Din Ibn Yunus and others.
He was one of those who were kidnapped by Hassan-e Sabah's agents and sent to Almout, Hassan's stronghold.
www.iranchamber.com /personalities/ntousi/nasir_tousi.php   (593 words)

  
 AhlulBayt Discussion Forum > Imam Mahdi's deputies during his occulation
When Mohammad ibn Ali Seymouri's death approached he was asked about his immediate successor.
O Ali ibn Mohammad Seymouri! May Allah increase the reward of your brothers on account of the difficulties born by you.
Kashi narrates: A 'Tawqi' (signed letter) was sent for Qasim ibn Ala with such contents: Whatever is narrated by the learned scholars upon whom we are having trust should never be doubted by our friends.
www.shiachat.com /forum/lofiversion/index.php/t45113.html   (1470 words)

  
 Al-Khwarizmi   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Al-Tabari's words should read: "Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi and al-Majusi al-Qutrubbulli...", (and that there are two people al-Khwarizmi and al-Majusi al-Qutrubbulli): the letter "wa" was omitted in the early copy.
This would not be worth mentioning if a series of conclusions about al-Khwarizmi's personality, occasionally even the origins of his knowledge, had not been drawn.
We have already discussed the varying views of the importance of al-Khwarizmi's algebra which was his most important contribution to mathematics.
www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk /~history/Mathematicians/Al-Khwarizmi.html   (2633 words)

  
 Business Software Review : Article 'Mohammad Najibullah'   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Mohammad Najibullah (1947–September 27, 1996) was the fourth President of Afghanistan during the period of the communist Democratic Republic of Afghanistan.
Najibullah was born in Kabul of a Ahmadzai Ghilzai Pashtun family.
After the withdrawal of the Soviet forces in 1989, and the overthrow of the Mohammad Najibullah rĂ½gime in 1992, Sayyaf's organisation's human rights record became noticeably worse, underlined by their involvement in the infamous massacres and rampages in the Kabul neighbourhood of Karte Seh
www.business-software-review.org /DisplayArticle46123.html   (610 words)

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