Table of Contents
-
FAḴR-AL-DĪN ʿERĀQĪ
Cross-Reference
See ʿERĀQI, FAḴR-AL-DIN.
-
FAḴR-AL-DĪN HAMADĀNĪ
Cross-Reference
-
FAḴR-al-DĪNZARRĀDĪ, MAWLĀNĀ
Sharif Husain Qasemi
a 14th century spiritual leader of the Češtī Sufi order in India.
-
FAḴR-AL-MOLK ARDALĀN
Cross-Reference
-
FAḴR-AL-MOLK, ABU’L-FATḤ MOẒAFFAR
C. Edmund Bosworth
b. Neẓām al-Molk (1043-1106/7), eldest son of the great Saljuq vizier and himself vizier to the Saljuq sultans Barkīāroq (1092-1105) and Moḥammad b. Malekšāh (1105-18).
-
FAḴR-AL-ZAMĀNĪ QAZVĪNĪ, ʿABD-AL-NABĪ
Cross-reference
See ʿABD-AL-NABĪ QAZVĪNĪ.
-
FAḴR-E MODABBER
EIr
pen-name of Moḥammad b. Manṣūr b. Saʿīd, entitled Mobārakšāh, author of two prose works in Persian written in India in the late 12th and early 13th century, a book on genealogy with no formal title and the famous Ādāb al-ḥarb wa’l-šajāʿa.
-
FAḴRĀʾĪ, EBRĀHĪM REŻĀZĀDA
Moḥammad-Taqī Pūr Aḥmad Jaktājī
(b. Rašt, 1899; d. Tehran, 1988), educator, journalist, lawyer, and scholar.
-
FAḴRĪ BANĀKATĪ
Cross-reference
See BANĀKATĪ.
-
FAḴRĪ HERAVĪ, SOLṬĀN-MOḤAMMAD
Sharif Husain Qasemi
b. Moḥammad Amīr Khan (or Solṭān) Amīrī Heravī (b. Herat, ca. 1497, d. probably in Agra, after 1566), poet, scholar, and Sufi who wrote on various aspects of the poetic art.