Table of Contents

  • ABŪ ʿALĪ QALANDAR

    Kh. A. Nizami

    (also known as SHAH BŪ ʿALĪ QALANDAR), Indian poet and saint, d. 725/1324. His mausoleum at Panipat remains a popular center for pilgrimage.

  • ABŪ ʿAMR AL-MĀZOLĪ

    J. van Ess

    Karrāmī theologian, fl. mid-4th/mid-10th century.

  • ABŪ ʿAṬĀ

    G. Tsuge

    one of the twelve modes in the dastgāh system of classical Iranian music; more precisely, it should be called āvāz-e Abū ʿAṭā or naḡma-ye Abū ʿAṭā.

  • ABŪ ʿAWĀNA

    J. A. Wakin

    a Shafeʿite legal scholar and traditionist.

  • ABŪ ʿAWN

    R. W. Bulliet

    a distinguished ʿAbbasid general, twice governor of Egypt and once of Khorasan.

  • ABŪ BAKR AL-WARRĀQ

    B. Reinert

    Sufi shaikh, born in Termeḏ, lived and worked in Balḵ, d. 280/893.

  • ABŪ BAKR B. ABĪ ṢĀLEḤ

    C. E. Bosworth

    vizier of the Ghaznavids in the 5th/11th century.

  • ABŪ BAKR B. PAHLAVĀN

    Cross-Reference

    See ATĀBAKĀN-E ĀḎARBĀYJĀN.

  • ABŪ BAKR B. SAʿD

    B. Spuler

    (623-58/1226-60), member of the Salghurid dynasty, atabeg of Fārs.

  • ABŪ BAKR ḤAṢĪRĪ

    Ḡ. Ḥ. Yūsofī

    Shafeʿite faqīh (jurist) and Ghaznavid official, d. 424/1033.