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Topic: Muhammad Sharif Pasha


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  Muhammad Sharif Pasha - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Muhammad Sharif Pasha (1826-1887) (Arabic: محمد شريف باشا) was an Egyptian statesman.
Sharif's favorite argument against any reform was to appeal to the Pyramids as an immutable proof of the solidity of Egypt financially and politically.
Upon the military insurrection of September 1881 under Arabi Pasha, Sharif was summoned by the khedive Tawfiq to form a new ministry.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Muhammad_Sharif_Pasha   (440 words)

  
 Ahlus-Sunna on Sharif Husayn (ra)
Sharif Ghalib Effendi, who served as the amir of Mecca for 26 years, was given a warm welcome of respect and love in Istanbul, and he was sent to Salonika where he reposed until he passed away in 1231 (1815).
Sharif Husain Pasha (rahmat-Allahi 'alaih) saw that the Unionists, exploiting the faith of Muslims and talking about jihad against non-Muslims, were leading the great empire to partition, that they were throwing thousands of Muslim youth into the fire, that their unawareness and dissipation were not compatible with their words in the least.
Sharif Husain Pasha is devoted to the Caliph of the Faithful in full obedience and always prays for the long life of His Majesty." Ghalib Pasha sent copies of this statement to Jamal Pasha, the commander of the fourth army and one of the ring-leaders of the Unionist bandits, and also to Istanbul.
www.mail-archive.com /msa_ec@listbot.com/msg02925.html   (7882 words)

  
 Gilanis
Sharif Al-Hassan III bin Muhammad Abu Numayy was born at Makkah in 1524.
Sharif Idrees II Abu Aun bin Hassan was born in 1566 A.D and Installed as Sharif of Makkah, by unanimous acclamation of the Sharifs in December 1601 A.D but abdicated and retired to Turkey in 1610 A.D. He died at Shammar in March 1624 A.D, having had issue: (1) Sharif Aun bin Idrees.
Sharif Sharf bin Abdullah, born at Makkah in 1851 and died at Taif in 1871.
www.gilani.com.pk /kings/sharif.htm   (9294 words)

  
 Raghib Pasha - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raghib Pasha was a significant Egyptian political figure.
He served as Prime Minister of Egypt on three occasions: from 1864 to 1866 as acting Prime Minister; from September 1867 to September 1868; and between 18 June and 21 August 1882.
During his final term, Arabi Pasha simultaneously served as Prime Minister of a rebel government.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Raghib_Pasha   (96 words)

  
 Egypt and the Eastern Question
Muhammad Ali, who has been called the "father of modern Egypt," was able to attain control of Egypt because of his own leadership abilities and political shrewdness but also because the country seemed to be slipping into anarchy.
According to the Treaty of 1841, Muhammad Ali was stripped of all the conquered territory except Sudan but was granted the hereditary governorship of Egypt for life, with succession going to the eldest male in the family.
Muhammad Ali was also compelled to agree to the Anglo-Ottoman Convention of 1838, which established "free trade" in Egypt.
www.shsu.edu /~his_ncp/593Egy.html   (9447 words)

  
 Africa and Slavery 1500-1800 by Sanderson Beck
Ozdemir Pasha was Yemen governor, and in 1555 he occupied Massawa on the Red Sea and conquered part of Ethiopia to establish the province of Habesh.
Muhammad tried to reassert his authority in Angad against his brother Rashid, but he was defeated and killed in battle.
Muhammad invaded the Hausaland, conquering Katsina and Zaria and killing their rulers; but Songhay had to withdraw from the Hausaland in 1515 because of the Kebbi revolt led by Kuta Kanta.
www.san.beck.org /1-13-Africa1500-1800.html   (22906 words)

  
 HizmetBooks
Muhammad 'Ali Pasha sent Sharif Ghalib Effendi to Istanbul when he arrived in Mecca and appointed his brother Yahya ibn Masud Effendi (rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) to be the amir of Mecca.
Ibrahim Pasha demolished the Dar'iyya fortress and returned to Egypt in Muharram 1235 A.H. And one of Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab's sons was brought to Egypt and kept in prison till he died.
Faruqi Sami Pasha was appointed the mutasarrif (governor of a subdivision of a province) of the Qasim town to end the bloody battles which had been taking place between the tribe of 'Abd al-'Aziz and that of Ibn ar-Rashid in the Najd deserts.
www.hizmetbooks.org /Advice_for_the_Muslim/wah-41.htm   (7946 words)

  
 Fuad I of Egypt - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Ahmed Fuad was born in Giza Palace in Cairo, the seventh son of Isma'il Pasha.
He was a member of the Muhammad Ali dynasty, a family of largely Albanian ancestry and came to prominence in Egypt under the Ottoman Empire.
He married, as his second wife, at the Bustan Palace, Cairo, May 26, 1919, Nazli Sabri (1894-1978), daughter of H.E. Abdu'r-Rahim Pasha Sabri, sometime Minister of Agriculture and Governor of Cairo, by his wife, Tawfika Khanum Sharif.
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/Fuad_I   (388 words)

  
 WORLD ENCYCLOPAEDIA - Egypt - From Intervention to Occupation, 1876-82   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
He appointed Nubar Pasha as prime minister and asked him to form a government containing two Europeans.
The leader of the delegates was the constitutionally minded Muhammad Sharif Pasha, who was among the members of a secret society called the National Society (later the Hulwan Society).
Sharif Pasha and his Egyptian cabinet dismissed the European ministers.
encyclopaedic.net /world/egypt/25.php   (1767 words)

  
 netcyclo: History: History 6
They also pointed out that European bankers and financiers loaned money to Egypt at usurious interest rates and, when it seemed Egypt would be unable to repay the loans, urged their governments to intervene to protect their interests.
Ismail's goals for Egypt were similar to those of his grandfather, Muhammad Ali.
Ismail achieved a considerable degree of independence from the Porte (from Sublime Porte, the term for the High Gate that came to be synonymous with the Ottoman government) by making large payments to the Ottoman treasury.
www.netcyclo.com /places/polit/nations/egypt/eg-his06.htm   (2253 words)

  
 Phoenicia: The Maronites and Lebanon, A Brief History
Next came the turn of the pasha of Damascus, in the battle of Anjar,4000 Lebanese captured the pasha and cut down 12,000 of his men.
According to the terms of this treaty, Muhammad Ali was asked to leave Syria; when he rejected this request, Ottoman and British naval units bombarded Beirut and troops landed on the Lebanese coast on September 10,1840.
Faced with this combined force, Muhammad Ali retreated, and on October 14,1840, Bashir II surrendered to the British and went into exile in Malta and later Constantinople where he died in1850.
www.phoenicia.org /maronites.html   (9590 words)

  
 Library of Congress / Federal Research Division / Country Studies / Area Handbook Series/ Libya / Glossary
In Islamic tradition, the Prophet Muhammad's successor as spiritual and temporal leader of the Islamic community.
In strict usage, descendants of the Prophet Muhammad through his daughter, Fatima; broadly, persons or groups having noble status.
Body of customs and practices based on the Prophet Muhammad's words and deeds as found in the Quran (q.v.) and the hadith (q.v.), which serve as guides to proper behavior for Muslims.
lcweb2.loc.gov /frd/cs/libya/ly_glos.html   (2029 words)

  
 Egypt3   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Appointed as Governor of Crete 1823, and Pasha of Acre 16
June 1858), instrumental in persuading the Sultan of Turkey to settle the hereditary succession on the family of Muhammad 'Ali in 1841, sister of Bamba Khanum, daughter of H.E. Muhammad Arif Bey, and grand daughter of H.H. Khalil Hamid Pasha, sometime Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire.
August 1931, Ahmad Bey Celâloglu, younger son of H.E. Muhammad 'Ali Jalal Pasha, by his second wife, H.H. Princess Iffat Khanum Effendi, second daughter of Field Marshal H.H. Prince Hasan Ismail Pasha, sometime Minister for War and High Commissioner for the Sudan.
www.4dw.net /royalark/Egypt/egypt3.htm   (2640 words)

  
 Match officials appointed -DAWN - Sport; May 30, 2005
Salahuddin Awan, Shahid Khan, Chaudhary Muhammad Sharif, Dilawar Hussain, Noor Muhammad, Sakhawat Ali Toor, Muhammad Ibrar, Nasir Kiani, Shafat Habib and Aamir Iqbal (referees).
Naeem Zaidi, Waheed Murad, Rauf bari, Fiaz Siddiqui, Muhammad Ramzan, Muhammad Sarwar, Asif Kiani and Shamas Pervez (referees).
Ejaz Hussain, Abrar Hussain, Muhammad Iqbal Junior, Akbar Ali Rajput, Aziz Pasha, Azam Bhatti, Saleem Raja, Younas Lal, Iqrar Hussain, Karim Baloch, Muhammad Jalal, Muhammad Danish and Muhammad Rehman are referees.
www.dawn.com /2005/05/30/spt12.htm   (233 words)

  
 Khalid al-Baghdadi
He was a traveler in Allah's World and he achieved all the kinds of knowledge available in his time.
The Prince Ihsan Ibrahim Pasha, the governor of Baban, tried to persuade him to look after the schools in his kingdom.
Finally, there came to Sulaymaniyyah the Shaykh Mawlana Mirza Rahimullah Beg al-M`aruf, known by the name of Muhammad ad-Darwish `Abdul `Azim al-Abadi, one of the khalifs of the spiritual pole, Qutb al-A`zam, `Abdullah ad-Dehlawi (q).
www.naqshbandi.org /chain/31.htm   (3262 words)

  
 Download Info of - Dogma   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
He was a member of the Muhammad Ali of Egypt dynasty, a family of Albanians origin which came to prominence in Egypt under the Ottoman Empire.
Queen Nazli also was a maternal granddaughter of Major-General H.E. Muhammad Sharif Pasha, sometime Prime Minister and Minister for Foreign Affairs, and a great-granddaughter of Suleiman Pasha, a French officer in Napoleon's army who converted to Islam and reorganized the Egyptian army.
The couple had five children, the future Farouk I and four daughters, the Princesses Fawzia of Egypt (who became Queen Consort of Iran), Faiza(princess), Faika, and Fathiya.
www.cwap.org /en/dogma   (3763 words)

  
 languagehat.com: April 2004 Archives
The life of Dawoud Pasha, the famous wali (governor) of Baghdad and one of the main characters in Ard Al-Sawad, is well known to historians.
In order to understand the significance of Dawoud Pasha's career, one needs to remember that the period 1775-1831 witnessed the relative breakdown of central authority in the Ottoman system, meaning that the administration in Constantinople lost effective control over many provincial governors, especially in the Fertile Crescent.
This backdrop, the properly historical part of the novel, must continuously be borne in mind when reading its narrative of events, which, with the exception of an introductory Prelude of a few, highly charged pages and occasional flashbacks, deal only with the first four years of Dawoud's period in office in Baghdad.
www.languagehat.com /archives/2004_04.php   (12281 words)

  
 The Leiden List: List of the Tablets of Baha'u'llah
Sections are addressed to 'Ali, the concourse of divines (245-8), Muhammad Husayn (250-251), a mother and daughter (251-3; corresponds to TB 157), all that dwell on earth (253-4), a 'handmaid' (255-6).
There are a number of other tablets addressed to Haji Muhammad Ibrahim-i Qazvini, one of which (tentatively numbered II although no date is available) appears to be translated at Gleanings CXXVII.
Lawh-i Mulla Muhammad Rida Manshadi, Rad al-Ruh (Tablet to Mulla Muhammad Rida of Manshad), early `Akka period.
www.bahai-library.com /resources/leiden.list/leiden.list.html   (14643 words)

  
 Ali Pasha - The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition - HighBeam Research   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
ALI PASHA [Ali Pasha], 1744?-1822, Turkish pasha [military governor] of Yannina (now Ioánnina, Greece), a province of the Ottoman Empire (Turkey).
to the Porte and Ali Pasha, the Grand Vezir...
First Secretary Sureyya Pasha, who made up for the fact...
www.highbeam.com /ref/doc0.asp?docid=1E1:AliPasha   (469 words)

  
 Egypt
9 Jul 1805 Muhammad `Ali dynasty informally inaugurated.
Jul 1803 - 31 Jan 1804 `Ali Pasha Jazairli (d.
Jul 1882 - 13 Sep 1882 Arabi Pasha (in rebellion) (b.
www.worldstatesmen.org /Egypt.html   (2903 words)

  
 Countries E
1863) 18 Jan 1863 - 8 Jun 1867 Isma`il Pasha (b.
1904) 18 Jun 1882 - 21 Aug 1882 Raghib Pasha Jul 1882 - 13 Sep 1882 Arabi Pasha (in rebellion) (b.
1911) 21 Aug 1882 - 7 Jan 1884 Muhammad Sharif Pasha (3rd time) (s.a.) 10 Jan 1884 - 9 Jun 1888 Nubar Pasha (2nd time) (s.a.) 9 Jun 1888 - 12 May 1891 Riyad Pasha (2nd time) (s.a.) 12 May 1891 - 15 Jan 1893 Mustafa Fahmi Pasha (1st time) (b.
www.rulers.org /rule.html   (7562 words)

  
 Everything about Asia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
In 1952 a popularly-supported military coup d'état forced King Farouk I, a constitutional monarch, to abdicate in support of his son King Ahmed Fouad II.
Finally the Egyptian Republic was declared on 18 June 1953 with General Muhammad Naguib as the first President of the Republic.
After Naguib resigned in 1954, Gamal Abdel Nasser, the real architect of the 1952 Revolution, assumed power as President and nationalized the Suez Canal leading to the 1956 Suez Crisis.
wikimiki.org /en/Asia   (9996 words)

  
 Online Books   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Jones, Jameelah Khatab, Amal Khattab, Huda Mohammed, Kosser Muhammad, Ata'ur...
Nagy, Luqman Nazlee, Sajda Ousama, Umm Pasha, Dr. Moham...
(Thanks to Sharif Ewees of www.blueplaidshirt.com who did the artwork on this.) curiouslymadstranger Tested on: N/A. (This set of skins was made by Christine Shannon www.geocities.com/curiouslymadstranger) Blue Gold Gray Green Purple Red Vanilla Yellow oneporpoise Tested on: IE, Mozilla, Opera.
www.booksoasis.com /Directory/Online_Books   (5418 words)

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