answersLogoWhite

0

What did al beruni and ibn batuta have in common?

Updated: 10/13/2023
User Avatar

ZaeemKhokharfb8976

Lvl 1
โˆ™ 7y ago

Best Answer

Because the beruni and batuta both writes book about war in arabic

User Avatar

Wiki User

โˆ™ 7y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
User Avatar

Maira Tariq

Lvl 1
โˆ™ 2y ago
(เน‘`โœชฬคโ—กโœชฬค)โ—žแƒฆิตีฐษ‘ีฒฦ˜ีแƒฆ
More answers
User Avatar

mehak kashif

Lvl 2
โˆ™ 9mo ago

tvrgrgrgrh4h5hh5h4y4h4hthth5h5hthth4b4hth4g4b4h4h4h4b4brbrb4g4brh4hhththtgbtbtbrvrvevevevegrvevewwvwvvwvwwcvwcwveevevveevveveevbtbttjrgsczawfrhmuujthfvdcdcdcgtthghkuukunjnhnhncfsaqswdqsqsaddfgbbtntbtbtbtbtbymilililulyrhmeyjwtjgebngegneteniky3jt2fbwtwht2hfu

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What did al beruni and ibn batuta have in common?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about American Government

Which nation was unified by Abd al-Aziz Ibn Saud?

In 1932 Abd al-Aziz Ibn Saud unified Saudi Arabia, then proclaimed himself King of Saudi Arabia


What do tx la ms al fl have in common?

The thing that Florida, Texas, Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi have in common, is that part of each of these states borders the Gulf of Mexico. The Gulf of Mexico is right around 300 million years old.


Which terrorist group was located in Afghanistan?

It is al-Qaeda.


What is a country ruled by a king or queen called?

Sweden, Monarchies around the worldAfricaLesotho - King Letsie IIIMorocco - King Mohammed VISwaziland - King Mswati IIIAsiaBhutan - King Jigme Khesar Namgyal WangchuckBrunei - Sultan Haji Hassanal BolkiiahCambodia - King Norodom SihamoniJapan - Emperor AkihitoMalaysia - Tuanku Abdul HalimThailand - King Bhumibol AdulyadejEuropeAndorra - Princes Nicolas Sarkozy and Joan Enric Vives SiciliaBelgium - King Albert IIDenmark - Queen Margarethe IILiechtenstein - Prince Hans Adam IILuxembourg - Grand Duke HenriMonaco - Prince Albert IINetherlands - Queen BeatrixNorway - King Harald VSpain - King Juan Carlos ISweden - King Carl Gustaf XVIUnited Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland - Queen Elizabeth IIMiddle EastBahrain - King Hamad bin Isa al-KhalifaJordan - King Abdullah IIKuwait - Emir Sabah Al-Ahmed Al Jaber Al-SabahOman - Sultan Oabus ibn Sa'idQatar - Emir Sheik Hamad ibn Khalifa al-ThaniSaudi Arabia - King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz al-SaudUnited Arab Emirates - Sheik Khalifa bin Zayed Al NahyanOtherTonga - King George Tupou V.That's 31 unless I've mis-counted.Countries with Constitutional Monarchies with Ceremonial MonarchsAndorraAntigua and BarbudaAustraliaBahamasBarbadosBelgiumBelizeCambodiaCanadaDenmarkGrenadaJamaicaJapanLesothoLuxembourgMalaysiaNetherlandsNew ZealandNorwayPapua New GuineaSaint Kitts and NevisSaint LuciaSaint Vincent and the GrenadinesSolomon IslandsSpainSwedenThailandTuvaluUnited KingdomCountries with Constitutional Monarchies with Active Monarchs(The prime minister is the nation's active executive but the monarch still has considerable political powers that can be used at their own discretion.)BahrainBhutanJordanKuwaitLiechtensteinMonacoMoroccoTongaUnited Arab EmiratesCountries with Absolute MonarchiesBruneiOmanQatarSaudi ArabiaSwaziland


Who is Abu Jafar Al-Mansur?

Al-Mansur, Almanzor or Abu Ja'far Abdallah ibn Muhammad al-Mansur (712–775; Arabic: ابو جعفر عبدالله ابن محمد المنصور) was the second Abbasid Caliph. He was born at al-Humaymah, the home of the 'Abbasid family after their emigration from the Hejaz in 687–688. His father, Muhammad, was a great-grandson of 'Abbas; his mother was a Berber woman[1]. He reigned from 754 until 775. In 762 he founded as new imperial residence and palace city Madinat as-Salam, which became the core of the Imperial capital Baghdad. Al-Mansur was concerned with the solidity of his regime after the death of his brother, Abu'l `Abbas, who later become known as-Saffah (the bloodshedder). In 755 he arranged the assassination of Abu Muslim. Abu Muslim was a loyal freed man from the eastern Iranian province of Khorasan who had led the Abbasid forces to victory over the Umayyads during the Third Islamic Civil War in 749-750. At the time of al-Mansur he was the subordinate, but undisputed ruler of Iran and Transoxiana. The assassination seems to have been made to preclude a power struggle in the empire. Al-Mansur certainly saw himself as universal ruler with religious and secular authority. His victory against Nafs az-Zakiya, a Shiite rebel in Southern Iraq and in the Arabian Peninsula further alienated certain Shiite groups. They had been hoping that an 'Abbasid victory would restore the caliphate to the Imamate, and that the rule of the "Al Muhammad", the family of the prophet would begin. But many were disappointed. During his reign, literature and scholarly work in the Islamic world began to emerge in full force, supported by new Abbasid tolerances for Persians and other groups suppressed by the Umayyads. Although the Umayyad caliph Hisham ibn Abd al-Malik had adopted Persian court practices, it was not until al-Mansur's reign that Persian literature and scholarship were truly appreciated in the Islamic world. The emergence of Shu'ubiya among Persian scholars occurred during the reign of al-Mansur as a result of loosened censorship over Persian nationalism. Shu'ubiya was a literary movement among Persians expressing their belief that Persian art and culture was superior to that of the Arabs; the movement served to catalyze the emergence of Arab-Persian dialogues in the eighth century. Al-Mansur also founded the House of Wisdom in Baghdad. Perhaps more importantly than the emergence of Persian scholarship was the conversion of many non-Arabs to Islam. The Umayyads actively tried to discourage conversion in order to continue the collection of the jizya, or the tax on non-Muslims. The inclusiveness of the Abbasid regime, and that of al-Mansur, saw the expansion of Islam among its territory; in 750, roughly 8% of residents in the Caliphate were Muslims. This would double to 15% by the end of al-Mansur's reign. Al-Mansur died in 775 on his way to Mecca to make hajj. He was buried somewhere along the way in one of the hundreds of graves that had been dug in order to hide his body from the Umayyads. He was succeeded by his son, al-Mahdi. According to Shiite sources, the scholar Abu Hanifa an-Nu'man was imprisoned by al-Mansur and tortured. He also had Imam Malik, the founder of another school of law, flogged. (Ya'qubi, vol.lll, p.86; Muruj al-dhahab, vol.lll, p.268-270.)

Related questions

Who wrote the book kitab al hind?

Al-BERUNI


Who is the writer of book kitab-ul-astarlab?

al beruni was the write of kitab ul ansar


Who wrote 'tahkik-i-hind'?

al beruni


Who wrote the book kitab ul hind?

Abu Al-Rayhan Muhammed Ibn Ahmad Al-Biruni


What are the achievements of al-beruni?

pata nhe :P hahahahahhahah


What are the achievements of al beruni?

pata nhe :P hahahahahhahah


Who is the writer of kitab ul ansar?

al beruni


When did Al-Hajjam al-Hasan ibn Muhammad ibn al-Qassim die?

Al-Hajjam al-Hasan ibn Muhammad ibn al-Qassim died in 944.


What has the author Ibn al-Khayyat written?

Ibn al-Khayyat has written: 'Diwan ibn al-Khayyat'


What has the author Ibn Al-Nafis written?

Ibn Al-Nafis. has written: 'The 'Theologus autodidactus' of Ibn al-Nafis'


When did Ibn al-Banna' al-Marrakushi die?

Ibn al-Banna' al-Marrakushi died on 1321-07-31.


When did Ibn al ameed die?

'Amr ibn al-'As died in 664.