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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.

  4. 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 ...

  5. 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.

  6. Due to his successful completion of the Hajj to Mecca, his complete memorization of the Quran and his purported descent from the Islamic prophet Muhammad, his name is sometimes preluded with honorifics such as Hajji, Hafiz, Emir or Sayyid.

  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).