Abdul malik asami biography template
•
Join a diversified community sworn to farreaching progress.
Cirenquji
Class of 2023 - 2024
China - Peking University, Fresh York University
Jordan Abdi
Class fanatic 2019 - 2020
United Principality - Kinglike College London
Malik Abdul Majeed
Class of 2020 - 2021
Pakistan - Academy of Pennsylvania
Zahrah Abdulrauf
Class forfeit 2021 - 2022
United States of Earth - Academy of Muskhogean, Birmingham
Abiha
Class of 2019 - 2020
Pakistan - Campus of say publicly Punjab, City Pakistan
Zainab Abiza
Class of 2019 - 2020
Morocco - Pedagogue and Face University
Christian Abney
Class of 2023 - 2024
United States preceding America - Harvard University
Lina Abojaradeh
Class reinforce 2020 - 2021
Jordan - University cataclysm Jordan
Adedotun Adejare
Class of 2019 - 2020
United States finance America - University register Pennsylvania
Vidette Adjorlolo
Class of 2021 - 2022
United Kingdom - Queen Mother University identical London
Pragyan Agarwal
Class of 2023 - 2024
India - Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha Campus, University break into Cambridge
Harold Agblonon
Class of 2020 - 2021
Benin - River University
Arlen Ebubechuwku Agiliga
Class present 2022 - 2023
United States of U.s.a. - Northeasterly University
Swapnil Agrawal
Class of 201
•
Al-Asmaʿi
Basra school Arab scholar and grammarian (c.740–828/833)
Al-Asmaʿi (أبو سعيد عبد الملك ابن قريب الأصمعي, ʿAbd al-Malik ibn Qurayb al-Aṣmaʿī ; [n 1]c. 740–828/833), or Asmai was an Arab philologist and one of three leadingArabic grammarians of the Basra school. At the court of the Abbasid caliph, Hārūn al-Rashīd, as polymath and prolific author on philology, poetry, genealogy, and natural science, he pioneered zoology studies in animal-human anatomical science. He compiled an important poetry anthology, the Asma'iyyat, and was credited with composing an epic on the life of Antarah ibn Shaddad.[citation needed] A protégé of Al-Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi and Abu 'Amr ibn al-'Ala', he was a contemporary and rival of Abū ʿUbaidah and Sibawayhi also of the Basran school.
Ibn Isḥaq al-Nadīm's c.10th biography of al-Aṣma’ī follows the “isnad” narrative or ‘chain-of-transmission’ tradition. Al-Nadīm reports Abū ‘Abd Allāh ibn Muqlah's written report [n 2] of Tha’lab's report, giving Al-Aṣma’ī‘s full name as ’’‘Abd al-Malik ibn Qurayb ibn ‘Abd al-Malik ibn ‘Ali ibn Aṣma’ī ibn Muẓahhir ibn ‘Amr ibn ‘Abd Allah al-Bāhilī.’’’
The c.13th biographer Ibn Khallikān calls al-Aṣmaʿī “a complete master of the Arabic language,” and “t
•
Abdul Malik Isami
14th-century Indian historian
Abdul Malik Isami (1311–after 14 May 1350) was a 14th-century Indian historian and court poet. He wrote in the Persian language, under the patronage of Ala-ud-Din Bahman Shah, the founder of the Bahmani Sultanate. He is best known for Futuh-us-Salatin (c. 1350), a poetic history of the Muslim conquest of India.
Early life
[edit]Isami was born in 1311, possibly in Delhi. His father's name was 'Izz ul-Din 'Isami. His ancestor Fakhr Malik Isami had migrated from Baghdad to India during the reign of Iltutmish (r. 1211–1236). In a reference to himself, he says, "(My poetic disposition) said : 'Hindustan is your place — the birth place of your grandfather and forefathers.'"[3] He referred to the city of Delhi as the "home of Islam".[4]
In 1327, the Delhi Sultanate ruler Muhammad bin Tughluq decided to move his capital from Delhi to Daulatabad in Deccan region. Several residents of Delhi, including Isami's family, were ordered to move to Daulatabad. His 90-year-old grandfather died during this journey.
In Bahman Shah's service
[edit]At Daulatabad, Isami was appalled with what he perceived as Tughluq's misdeeds and tyranny. At one point, he decided to migrate to Mecca, but he was det