Table of Contents
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ḤABL AL-MATIN
Nassereddin Parvin
(lit. strong cord), name of three newspapers published in Calcutta, Tehran, and Rašt.
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ḤABLARUD
M. H. Ganji
river in Damāvand and Garmsār districts of Semnān province in northern Persia.
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ḤADĀʾEQ AL-SEḤR
N. Y. Chalisova
shortened title of the famous treatise Ḥadāʾeq al-seḥr fi daqāʾeq al-šeʿr (“Gardens of magic in the subtleties of poetry”) by Rašid(-e) Waṭwāt (d. 1182-83).
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HADAF EDUCATIONAL GROUP
Aḥmad Birašk
(Goruh-e Farhangi-e Hadaf), a pioneering private educational complex founded in Tehran in 1949-50.
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HĀDI ḤASAN
K. A. Jaisi
Indian scholar of Persian literature (1894-1963).
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HĀDI SABZAVĀRI
Seyyed Hossein Nasr
(1797-1873), Shaikh Mollā, prominent Islamic philosopher of the Qajar period, also known as a theologian and poet.
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ḤADIQAT AL-ḤAQIQA WA ŠARIʿAT AL-ṬARIQA
J.T.P. de Bruijn
a Persian didactical maṯnawi by the twelfth-century poet Ḥakim Majdud b. Ādam Sanāʾi.
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HADIŠ (1)
cross-reference
See PALACE i. ACHAEMENID.
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HADIŠ (2)
Mary Boyce
the Avestan name of a minor Zoroastrian divinity, glossed in Pahlavi (tr. of Visprad 1:9) by mēnōg ī xānag “Spirit of the house.”
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HADITH
Shahab Ahmed, A. Kazemi-Moussavi, Ismail K. Poonawala, Hamid Algar, Shaul Shaked
term denoting reports that convey the normative words and deeds of the Prophet Moḥammad; it is understood to refer generically to the entire corpus of this literature and to the thousands of individual reports that comprise it.