Al-Samarqandi
Topics referred to by the same term / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
al-Samarqandi (Arabic: السمرقندي) or Samarqandi (Persian: سمرقندی, Tajik: Самарқандӣ) is a nisba meaning "from Samarqand", a city in Central Asia (Greater Persia), in modern Uzbekistan. It may refer to:
- Abd Allāh ibn ‘Abd ar-Raḥmān ad-Dārimi as-Samarqandī, known as al-Darimi, 9th-century Muslim scholar and imam
- Abu Bakr al-Samarqandi (died 268/881–2) a Sunni-Hanafi theologian who was polemicising against Ibn Karram's theology
- Abu Mansur al-Maturidi (853–944), also al-Samarqandi, 9th-century Sunni Hanafi jurist, theologian, and scriptural exegete
- Al-Hakim al-Samarqandi (died 342/953), student of al-Maturidi and qadi of Samarqand
- Abu al-Layth al-Samarqandi (died 373/983), Hanafi scholar
- Shams al-Din al-Samarqandi (died 702/1302), Hanafi-Maturidi theologian, astronomer and mathematician, author of al-Saha'if al-Ilahiyyah (Arabic: الصحائف الإلهية)
- Nizami Aruzi Samarqandi (fl. 1110–1161), 12th-century Persian poet and prose writer
- Fatima al-Samarqandi, 12th-century female Muslim scholar and jurist
- Suzani Samarqandi (died 1166), 12th-century Persian poet
- Abd-al-Razzāq Samarqandī (1413–1482), 15th-century Timurid chronicler and Islamic scholar
- Najib ad-Din Samarqandi (died 1222), 13th-century physician
- Athir al-Din al-Abhari, also al-Samaqandi, 13th-century philosopher, astronomer, astrologer and mathematician
- Qāzī Abd as-Salām Samarqandī, a 16-century scholar and father of the Sufi saint Khwaja Baqi Billah
- Sipandi Samarkandi (1829–1909), 19th-century Tajik bilingual poet
- Fitrat Zarduz Samarqandi [ru] (born 1657), Tajik poet
This disambiguation page lists articles about people with the same name.
If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.