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MAHDAVI, Yaḥyā
Moḥammad Ḵᵛānsāri and EIr
Mahdavi continued his education at Tehran Teachers College from 1928 until 1931, from which he was among the first to graduate with a bachelor's degree. In 1931, he received a scholarship from the state to continue his education in France until his graduation in 1938, writing his doctoral thesis under André Lanlande and Emile Bréhier.
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MAHDI
Cross-Reference
“the rightly-guided one” in Arabic, designation of the descendant of the Prophet who is expected to return to rule the world.
See in entry ISLAM in IRAN:
vi. THE CONCEPT OF MAHDI IN SUNNI ISLAM;
vii. THE CONCEPT OF MAHDI IN TWELVER SHIʿISM;
viii. THE OCCULTATION OF MAHDI;
ix. THE DEPUTIES OF MAHDI. -
MAḤFEL-E RUḤĀNI
Moojan Momen
current designation of the Bahai governing councils elected at local and national level.
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MAHJUB, MOHAMMAD JA’FAR
Mahmoud Omidsalar
prominent scholar of Persian literature, essayist, translator, university teacher, and one of the founders of the discipline of folklore in Iran.
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MAḤJUBI, Morteżā
Morteżā Ḥoseyni Dehkordi and EIr
(1900-1965), composer and pianist, noted for his use of the piano to perform traditional Iranian music.
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MAḤJUBI, Reżā
Morteżā Ḥoseyni Dehkordi and EIr
(1898-1954) composer and violinist, brother of Morteżā.
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MAḤMUD B. SEBÜKTEGIN
C. Edmund Bosworth
the first fully independent ruler of the Turkish Ghaznavid dynasty, who reigned (388-421/998-1030) over what had become by his death a vast military empire.
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MAḤMUD MIRZĀ
Dominic Parviz Brookshaw
(b. 1799, d. between 1854 and 1858), fifteenth son of Fatḥ-ʿAli Shah Qajar (r. 1797-1834), calligrapher, poet, and anthologist.
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MAHMUD, AHMAD
Saeed Rezaei and Maryam Seyedan
(1931-2002), Iranian contemporary novelist and short story writer.
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MAJALLA-ye JAMʿIYAT-e NESWĀN-e WAṬANḴᵛĀH-e IRĀN
Nassereddin Parvin
magazine of the women's association of that name, 1923-26.
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MAJALLA-ye RASMI-e ṮABT
Nassereddin Parvin
official journal of the Ministry of Justice from 1928.
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MAJD, Loṭf-Allāh
Morteżā Ḥoseyni Dehkordi and EIr
tār player known for his brilliant virtuosity and distinctive style (1917-1978).
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MAJD-AL-ESLĀM KERMĀNI
Maryam Kamali
Shaikh Aḥmad (1871-1923), journalist, participant/observer in the Constitutional Revolution of 1905-11. One of his basic concerns was to spread knowledge, a notion expressed through foreign and national news coverage in the newspaper Adab.
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MAJD-AL-MOLK II
M. Dabirsiāqi
Majd-al-Molk was a learned man with a knowledge of Persian and Arabic literature. He was knowledgeable in philosophy and religious sciences and was an expert in calligraphy, engraving, and all kinds of secretarial craft. As a poet, he followed the style of past masters. Samples of his poetry mentioned by Ebrāhim Khan Madāyeḥnegār.
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MAJDUʿ, ESMĀʿIL
Ismail K. Poonawala
(d. 1769-70), an Ismaʿili scholar from India, well-known for his Bibliography (Fehrest) of extant Ismaʿili manuscripts.
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MAJLESI, Moḥammad-Bāqer
Rainer Brunner
(b. 1627; d. 1699 or 1700), an eminent Twelver Shiʿite jurist in Safavid Iran (1501-1722) and one of the most important hadith scholars of Twelver Shiʿism.
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MAJLESI, MOḤAMMAD-TAQI
Rainer Brunner
b. Maqṣud-ʿAli Eṣfahāni, commonly referred to as Majlesi-ye Awwal, an important Twelver Shiʿite jurist and Hadith scholar of the Aḵbāri school.
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MAḴDUM ŠARIFI ŠIRĀZI
Kioumars Ghereghlou
(1540-41 to 1587), Sunni bureaucrat and polemicist; he held office as ṣadr or minister of religious affairs and endowments at the court of Shah Esmāʿil II Ṣafawi, and eventually fled to the Ottoman Empire.
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MAKRĀN
C. E. Bosworth
(also Mokrān) the coastal region of Baluchistan, extending from the Somniani Bay to the northwest of Karachi in the east westwards to the fringes of the region of Bashkardia/Bāšgerd in the southern part of the Sistān and Balučestān province of modern Iran.
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MAKTAB
Cross-Reference