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  2. List of people in both the Bible and the Quran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_in_both_the...

    Not identified by name in the Quran. Sarah, Hagar, Zipporah, Elizabeth, Raphael, Cain and Abel, Korah, Joseph's brothers, Potiphar and his wife, Eve, Jochebed, Samuel, Noah's sons, and Noah's wife are mentioned, but unnamed in the Quran. In Islamic tradition, these people are given the following names: Image. Bible (English) Arabic.

  3. Battle of al-Yamama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_al-Yamama

    During the life of Muhammad, many parts of the written Quran were scattered among his companions, retained as private possession. However, about 360 huffaz (Muslims who had memorized the Qur'an) died at Yamama. Consequently, upon the insistence of his future successor Umar, Abu Bakr ordered what is known as the first standardisation of the Qur ...

  4. Nahdlatul Ulama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nahdlatul_Ulama

    Nahdlatul Ulama ( Indonesian pronunciation: [nahˈdatʊl ʊˈlama], lit. 'Revival of the Ulama ', NU) is an Islamic organization in Indonesia. Its membership numbered over 95 million in 2021, [ 2] making it the largest Islamic organization in the world. [ 3] NU is also a charitable body funding schools and hospitals as well as organizing ...

  5. Women in Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Islam

    Primary. A fragment of Sūrat an-Nisā' – a chapter of Islam's sacred text entitled 'Women' – featuring the Persian, Arabic, and Kufic scripts. Islam views men and women as equal before God, and the Quran underlines that man and woman were "created of a single soul" (4:1, [ 15] 39:6 [ 16] and elsewhere).

  6. Musaylima - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musaylima

    Musaylima ( Arabic: مُسَيْلِمَةُ ), otherwise known as Musaylima ibn Ḥabīb ( Arabic: مسيلمه ابن حبيب) d.632, was a claimant of prophethood [ 1][ 2][ 3] from the Banu Hanifa tribe. [ 4][ 5] Based from Diriyah in present day Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, he claimed to be a prophet and was an enemy of Islam in 7th-century Arabia.

  7. Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_ibn_Abd_al-Wahhab

    Muhammad ibn ῾Abd al-Wahhab (1703–1792), was a scholar and Hanbali jurist who called for a return to the fundamental sources of Islamic revelation, the Qur᾽an and sunna (example of Muhammad) for direct interpretation, resulting in decreased attention to and reliance upon medieval interpretations of these sources.

  8. Quranism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quranism

    Islam portal. v. t. e. Quranism ( Arabic: القرآنية, romanized : al-Qurʾāniyya) is an Islamic movement that holds the belief that the Quran is the only valid source of religious belief, guidance, and law in Islam. Quranists believe that the Quran is clear, complete, and that it can be fully understood without recourse to the hadith and ...

  9. Abdul-Rahman al-Sa'di - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul-Rahman_al-Sa'di

    Al-Sa'di was born in the city of Unayzah, al-Qassim, Saudi Arabia on 7 September 1889. His father, Nasir al-Sa'di, was an imam and preacher in a mosque in the Unayzah. [ 6] His mother, Fatimah bint Abdullah al-'Uthaymeen, [ 7] died when he was four years old, and his father died when he was seven. He was initially cared for by his father's ...