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Examples
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Some renowned writers of such poetry are Jalal-uddin Rumi, Bulleh Shah, Mirza Ghaleb, etc.
Boing Boing 2009
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May 30th, 2007 at 6: 13 pm thahamid uddin they have the best food i ever tried. its very cheap and very good. i loved it i will go again again
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After a march of eleven miles we reached Ghazi-uddin nagar, to find the place deserted.
Forty-one years in India From Subaltern To Commander-In-Chief Frederick Sleigh Roberts
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Nasir-uddin had entered the service of the last prince of the Assassins only for the purpose of avenging himself on the Khalif, who had disparaged one of his works.
Arabic Authors A Manual of Arabian History and Literature F. F. Arbuthnot 1867
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Taki-uddin, of Fez, composed the best history of Mekka, and A'ini, who died A.D. 1451, wrote two celebrated historical works.
Arabic Authors A Manual of Arabian History and Literature F. F. Arbuthnot 1867
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More than ten historians flourished at the beginning of this period whose names terminated with 'din,' such as Baha-uddin, Imad-uddin,
Arabic Authors A Manual of Arabian History and Literature F. F. Arbuthnot 1867
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The 'Alfiyya,' or Quintessence of Arab Grammar, was written in verse by Jamal-uddin Abu Abdallah Muhammad, known under the name of Ibn
Arabic Authors A Manual of Arabian History and Literature F. F. Arbuthnot 1867
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Julal-uddin Sayuti is said to be the author of some four hundred works, and he died in A.D. 1505, some twelve years before the conquest of Egypt by Selim I, the Sultan of Turkey, when independent Arab literature under Arab sovereigns came to an end.
Arabic Authors A Manual of Arabian History and Literature F. F. Arbuthnot 1867
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After the burning of the library at Alamut (the stronghold of the Assassins, where they kept their literary treasures) and the sacking of Baghdad by Halaku Khan, the erection of the astronomical observatory at Maragha, under the direction of Nasir-uddin Tusy, was the first sign that Arab civilization and the cultivation of science had not been entirely extinguished by Tartar barbarism.
Arabic Authors A Manual of Arabian History and Literature F. F. Arbuthnot 1867
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Majr-uddin Muhammad Bin Yakub, surnamed Firuzabadi, a learned Persian, was the author of the largest and most celebrated Arabic dictionary in existence at the time, called the 'Qânûs,' or Ocean, a standard work to this day, and always greatly praised, and also used by European lexicographers.
Arabic Authors A Manual of Arabian History and Literature F. F. Arbuthnot 1867
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