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  1. Muhammad Ahmad ibn as-Sayyid Abd Allah, conocido también como El Mahdi o Muhammad Ahmed al-Mahdi (en árabe: ‏محمد بن السيد عبد الله بن فحل Muhammad bin as-SayyīdAbdallāh ibn Fahl, DMG Muḥammad Aḥmad b. as-Sayyīd ‘Abd Allāh b. Faḥl) ( Darar, cerca de Dongola, 12 de agosto de 1844 – Omdurmán, 22 de ...

  2. Death and succession. Aftermath. Political heritage. In popular culture. See also. References. Citations. Bibliography. Further reading. Muhammad Ahmad bin Abdullah bin Fahal ( Arabic: محمد أحمد بن عبد الله بن فحل; 12 August 1843 – 21 June 1885) was a Sudanese religious and political leader.

  3. Muhammad Ahmad ibn as-Sayyid Abd Allah, conocido también como El Mahdi o Muhammad Ahmed al-Mahdi (en árabe: ‏محمد بن السيد عبد الله بن فحل Muhammad bin as-Sayyīd ‘Abdallāh ibn Fahl, DMG Muḥammad Aḥmad b. as-Sayyīd ‘Abd Allāh b. Faḥl) ( Darar, cerca de Dongola, 12 de agosto de 1844 – Omdurmán, 22 de ...

  4. Muhammad Ahmad b. ˓Abdullah, known as al-Mahdi, was born in 1844 in northern Sudan and died on 22 June 1885 in Omdurman. He did not follow his family's profession of boat building, embarking instead on a religious and political career. He studied Qur˒anic and other religious sciences and joined the Sammaniyya mystical brotherhood.

  5. Muhammad Ahmad ibn as Sayyid Abd Allah (otherwise known as The Mahdi or Mohammed Ahmed) (August 12, 1844 – June 22, 1885) was a Muslim religious leader and a Sufi teacher, in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. He declared a jihad and raised an army after declaring himself the Mahdi, a Messianic figure in Islamic thought, in 1881, and led a successful ...

  6. Enciclopedia para niños. Muhammad Ahmad ibn as-Sayyid Abd Allah, conocido también como El Mahdi o Muhammad Ahmed al-Mahdi (en árabe: ‏محمد بن السيد عبد الله بن فحل Muhammad bin as-Sayyīd ‘Abdallāh ibn Fahl, DMG Muḥammad Aḥmad b. as-Sayyīd ‘Abd Allāh b.

  7. The first person of Ba 'Alawi sada to acquire the surname al-Haddad (The Ironsmith) was Imam al-Haddad's ancestor, Sayyid Ahmad bin Abu Bakr. The Sayyid, who lived in the ninth century of the Hijra , took to sitting at the ironsmith’s shop in Tarim much of the time, hence he was called Ahmad al-Haddad (Ahmad the Ironsmith).