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2 unusual facts about Zaidi


Islam in Iran

Since much of the Abbasid administration had been Persian anyway, the Buwayhid, who were Zaidi Shia, were quietly able to assume real power in Baghdad.

Ismah

Zaidi Shi`ites however, do not attribute ‘ismah to the Imāms.


Ahmad Zaidi Adruce

Since his unique birth in a boat along the Rajang River, the longest river in Malaysia and the pride of Sarawak, Ahmad Zaidi has traveled a long way.

Al-Hadi Yahya

People in the traditional centre of the Zaidi polity, Sa'dah, accepted Najm ad-Din Yahya as imam under the name al-Hadi Yahya.

Al-Mahdi Ahmad bin al-Husayn

The new imam took the traditional capital of the Zaidi imams, Sa'dah, from the Sulaimanids, and extended his sway over 20 fortresses.

Al-Mahdi Ali

In the presence of a numerous congregation of Zaidi scholars, he adopted the title al-Mahdi Ali and took possession of Sa'dah and Dhamar.

Al-Mahdi Ibrahim

The Zaidi leaders drew up plans of advancing further to Dhamar.

Al-Mansur al-Husayn II

In 1738 a serious crisis occurred in the relations between the Zaidi government and the French traders in Mocha.

Al-Mansur al-Qasim al-Iyyani

The governor in Dhamar, az-Zaidi, rebelled and captured the imam's son Ja'far.

Al-Mansur Ali bin Salah ad-Din

He had to fight hard to gain control over Sa'dah, the traditional centre of Zaidi power in the north.

Al-Mansur Muhammad

Al-Mu'ayyad Muhammad ruled San'a and the surrounding districts; the Kawkaban area stood under the sons of the old imam al-Mutawakkil al-Mutahhar; and the traditional Zaidi centre Sa'dah and its districts were divided between al-Mansur Muhammad and two other families.

Al-Mu’ayyad Muhammad

The sons of the old imam al-Mutawakkil al-Mutahhar dominated Kawkaban, and the region around the traditional Zaidi centre Sa'dah was divided between imam al-Mansur Muhammad and two other factions.

Al-Mu’id li-Din Illah

A Caspian Zaidi leader in Persia, Abu Talib Yahya, is sometimes formally counted as imam in the period 1020-1033 in Zaydiyyah historiography.

Al-Mutawakkil Ahmad

Sharif Hamud again proclaimed his allegiance to the Zaidi imam and restored to him the cities Luhayya, Hudaydah and Bayt al-Faqih.

Al-Mutawakkil Yahya Sharaf ad-Din

The Tahiride Dynasty ruled the lowlands and southern highland from Ta'izz, and had recently sacked the Zaidi capital San'a.

An-Nasir Ahmad

After a sojourn in Medina he returned to the Zaidi capital in Yemen, Sa'dah, where he was chosen to succeed his brother al-Murtada Muhammad in September 913.

Hakim Sanaullah Cancer Centre

On June 29, 2009, Dr Shuaib Zaidi a surgical oncologist, assisted by Dr Yusuf Tak, an anaesthetist, implanted a Chemoport Device, which is an embedded device within the layers of the skin, to act as a port for the administration of chemotherapeutic drugs for cancer.

Hazrat Sakhi Shah Chan Charagh

The Minbar at Darbar has been graced by notable scholars from Allama Mirza Yousaf Hussain, Hafiz Kifayat Hussain, Syed Azhar Hassan Zaidi, Hafiz Aashiq Hussain, to illustrious modern luminaries like Mohsin Naqvi, Allama Talib Johri, Agha Naseem Abbas and Allama Ghazanfar Abbas Tonsvi as the ace cynosure delivering three ashraas a year.

Jouli

Sayyids of this village are Kazimi (Musavi) who came to India from Gardez Afghanistan, while Barha Sayyids are Zaidi Alwasti.

Saada Governorate

The conflict has its roots in an insurgency against the government of Yemen which was initiated by the Zaidi religious leader Hussein Badreddin al-Houthi in 2004.

Sayyid of Gujarat

In Gujarat, the Sayyid have ten sub-divisions, the main ones being the Shirazi, Mattari, Bukhari, Naqvi, Tirmizi, Zaidi, Rifai, Bhaktari, Qadiris, Chishti, mahdavi, Kitoi, Mashadi, Idrusi, and Bahraini.

Syed Ibne Hasan Nonaharvi

He read majalises at Husainia Irshadia, Rudauli by invitation of Syed Irshad Husain Zaidi for 58 years and also read at Hyderabad, Rampur, Jalali, Lucknow and many other places.

Turan-Shah

In 1175, he drove out the Hamdanid emir, Ali ibn Hakim al-Wahid, from Sana'a after the latter's army was weakened by continuous raids from the Zaidi tribes of Sa'dah.

Zabd shuda nazmein

They were published in 1975 by a committee called "Jashn-e-Zaidi", translated to English as "A Celebration for Zaidi", formed to honor Shri Ali Jawad Zaidi, a noted writer, statesman and freedom fighter.

Zahur Haider Zaidi

Zahur Zaidi's family traces its origins in Village Baragaon Tehsil Shahgunj District Jaunpur, Uttar Pradesh, India.


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