Qadi Husayn Maybudi - définition. Qu'est-ce que Qadi Husayn Maybudi
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est Qadi Husayn Maybudi - définition


Qadi Husayn Maybudi         
  • A 1648 manuscript copy of one of the works of Maybudi
MUSLIM PHILOSOPHER
Maibazi; Qadi Mir Husayn al-Maybudi
Qadi Kamal al-Din Husayn ibn Mu'in al-Din Ali Maybudi (), better known as Qadi Husayn Maybudi (), was an Iranian scholar and qadi (judge) in the city of Yazd under the Aq Qoyunlu. He was executed in 1504 after having participated in a failed revolt against the Safavid shah (king) Ismail I ().
Mullá Husayn         
  • The [[Great Mosque of Kufa]], where Mullá Husayn and his companions retired in early 1844
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  • Imam Reza Shrine]] complex in [[Mashhad]], which now contains the formerly freestanding [[Goharshad Mosque]] where Mullá Husayn preached.
  • The room where Mullá Husayn accepted the religion of the Báb on the evening of 22 May 1844, in his house in [[Shiraz]].
  • Drawing of the Shrine of [[Shaykh Tabarsi]] by [[Edward Granville Browne]].
  • The Shrine of [[Shaykh Tabarsi]]
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  • The Báb's tablet to Mullá Husayn, the first Letter of the Living
  • The Vakil Mosque, where Mullá Husayn preached and taught theology classes during his time in Shiraz.
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PERSIAN LETTER OF THE LIVING, THE FIRST PERSON TO PROFESS BELIEF IN THE BÁB
Mulla Husayn; Mullá Husayn-i-Bushru'i; Mulla Husayn-i-Bushru'i; Mullah Husayn
Mullá Husayn (1813 – 2 February 1849) ( Mulláh Hossein Boshru'i), also known by the honorific Jináb-i Bábu'l-Báb ("Gate of the Gate"), was a Persian religious figure in 19th century Persia and the first Letter of the Living of the Bábí religion. He was the first person to profess belief in the Báb as the promised Mahdi of Islam and a Manifestation of God, founding a new independent religion.
Qāḍī Zāda al-Rūmī         
ISLAMIC MATHEMATICIAN-ASTRONOMER
Qazi Zadeh; Al-Rumi Qadi Zada; Qadi Zada al-Rumi; Qādī Zāda; Qadi Zada; Qāḍī Zāda; Salah al-Din Musa Pasha; Qadizada; Qādī Zādeh; Qadi Zadeh; Qadi-zada; Kadi-zada; Kadi-zade; Qādī Zāda al-Rūmī; Qazizada; Qazi-Zadeh Rumi; Qadizada al-Rumi; Qāḍīzāda al-Rūmī; Qadizade al-Rumi
(1364 in Bursa, Ottoman Empire – 1436 in Samarqand, Timurid Empire), whose actual name was Salah al-Din Musa Pasha ( means "son of the judge", al-rūmī "the Roman" indicating he came from Asia Minor, which was once Roman), was a Turkish astronomer and mathematician who worked at the observatory in Samarkand. He computed sin 1° to an accuracy of 10−12.