Tarikh al-Khamis fi ahwal anfas nafis or Tarikh Khamis or Tarikh al-Khamis is a history collection about the history of Islam authored by Sunni Islamic Scholar Husayn ibn Muhammad Diyarbakri,[1][2] (who died in either 1559 CE (966 AH) or 1574 CE (982 AH)),[3][4] and published in Cairo[5] in 1884 CE (1302 AH) and reprinted in Beirut in 1390 AH[6] Diyarbakri is among the most popular compilers of later times.[5] It is also transliterated as Tareekh Khamees and Tareekh-e-Khamees.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Shayk Muhammed Hisham Kabbani. Gabriel F Haddad, Alexandra Bain, Karim K Tourk, Jennifer McLennan. "Diyarbakri" in Encyclopedia of Islamic Doctrine. Second Edition. As-sunnah Foundation of America. 1998. ISBN 9781871031867. Volume 2 (Remembrance of Allah and Praising the Prophet). Pages 129 to 131 and 194.
  2. ^ Answering-Ansar.org :: Fadak; The property of Fatima al-Zahra [as] Archived 2007-01-25 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "On the Reconstruction of Lost Sources" (2004) 25 Al Qantara 57 Google Books
  4. ^ "al-Diyarbakri" in E J Brill's First Encyclopedia of Islam 1913–1936. Reprint Edition. E J Brill. 1987. ISBN 9789004082656. Volume 2. The Encyclopedia of Islam: A Dictionary of the Geography, Ethnography and Biography of the Muhammedan Peoples. E J Brill and Luzac & Co. 1913 to 1938.
  5. ^ a b "Mahomet". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17. 1911. p. 410 .
  6. ^ Paul Wheatly. The Places Where Men Pray Together: Cities in Islamic Lands, Seventh Through the Tenth Centuries. University of Chicago Press. 2001. ISBN 0226894282. Page 519.