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Examples

  • In the person of a man who was “by repute arrogant, egotistical, and a fanatic proselytizer of Ithna Ashari, that is to say Twelver Shiite Islam,” a man who calls himself “Vali Allah, the vicar of God … Modesty, generosity, kindness: these were not his most renowned characteristics,” it is perhaps not fanciful to discern the outline of a prototype Khomeini.

    Cassocks and Codpieces 2008

  • In the person of a man who was “by repute arrogant, egotistical, and a fanatic proselytizer of Ithna Ashari, that is to say Twelver Shiite Islam,” a man who calls himself “Vali Allah, the vicar of God … Modesty, generosity, kindness: these were not his most renowned characteristics,” it is perhaps not fanciful to discern the outline of a prototype Khomeini.

    Cassocks and Codpieces 2008

  • So reads the fiqh of the 'Ashari' aqida, and the other schools have assented with greater or lesser joy.

    Analog Science Fiction and Fact 2004

  • Humar Sono, the director of the Hasyim Ashari Hospital, says they are treating 15 victims at the Ashari hospital.

    Scores Killed, Injured in Indonesian Train Collision 2010

  • Humar Sono, the director of the Hasyim Ashari Hospital, says they are treating 15 victims at the Ashari hospital.

    Scores Killed, Injured in Indonesian Train Collision 2010

  • In Islam, the popular view on predestination comes from one of the most orthodox, and early schools of thought, the Asharite school, founded by an Iraqi Arab theologian al-Ashari (874-936 AD), and from theologians such as al-Ghazali (1058-1111 AD) of Iranian origin, and ibn Taymiyyah (1263-1328 AD) of Turkish origin.

    Printing: Divine Will and Human Freedom -- Part I. Divine Predestination: How Far Real? 2010

  • In Islam, the popular view on predestination comes from one of the most orthodox, and early schools of thought, the Asharite school, founded by an Iraqi Arab theologian al-Ashari (874-936 AD), and from theologians such as al-Ghazali (1058-1111 AD) of Iranian origin, and ibn Taymiyyah (1263-1328 AD) of Turkish origin.

    Divine Will and Human Freedom -- Part I. Divine Predestination: How Far Real? 2010

  • Despite being named for Ashari, the most influential work of this school's thought was "The Incoherence of the Philosophers", by the Muslim polymath Al-Ghazali d.

    Al-Ghazali Tusar N Mohapatra 2005

  • Despite being named for Ashari, the most influential work of this school's thought was "The Incoherence of the Philosophers", by the Muslim polymath Al-Ghazali d.

    Archive 2005-10-01 Tusar N Mohapatra 2005

  • This same Omar wrote a letter to Abou Mousa el Ashari, [FN#40] to the following purport, 'When these presents reach thee, give the people what is theirs and send the rest to me.'

    The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Volume II Anonymous 1879

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