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9th-century Arab people

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Warsh
thumb|The end of Thaalibia Quran printed in Warsh's narration. '''Abu Sa'id Uthman Ibn Sa‘id al-Qebṭi, better known as Warsh' (110-197AH), was a significant figure in the history of Quranic recitation (qira'at''), the canonical methods of reciting the Qur'an. Alongside Qalun, he was one of the two primary transmitters of the canonical reading method of Nafi‘ al-Madani. Together, their style is the most common form of Qur'anic recitation in the generality of African mosques outside of Egypt, and is also popular in Yemen and Darfur despite the rest of Sudan following the method of Hafs. The meth
Sahnun
Sahnun ibn Said ibn Habib al-Tanukhi () (c. 776/77 – 854/55) (160 AH – 240 AH ) was a jurist in the Maliki school from Qayrawan in modern-day Tunisia.
Dik al-Djinn
Arab poet
Umar al-Aqta
9th-century ruler of the Arab emirate of Malatya
Hamdan Qarmat
9th century Iraqi religious leader
Al-Abbas ibn al-Ma'mun
Abbasid prince and Military leader (died 838 CE)
Khalid ibn Yazid al-Shaybani
9th-century Abbasid military general and governor
Ibn Kullab
Islamic Theologian
Ahmad al-Wafi
Eighth Ismaili imam (c. 766–828)
Abu 'Abdullah al-Shi'i
10th-century Iraqi Isma'ili missionary
Abd al-Malik ibn Habīb
Andalusian Arab polymath (796–853)
Hamdan ibn Hamdun
9th-century Taghlibi Arab chieftain
Husayn ibn Hamdan
Abbasid general
Al-Adli
Al-Adli al-Rumi (; 800–870), was an Arab player and theoretician of Shatranj, an ancient form of chess from Persia. Originally from Anatolia, he authored one of the first treatises on Shatranj in 842, called Kitab ash-shatranj ('Book of Chess').
Al-Azraqi
'''Muhammad ibn 'Abd Allah Al-Azraqi' () was a 9th-century Islamic commentator and historian, and author of the Book of Reports about Mecca (Kitab Akhbar Makka'').
Al-Duri
Abu ‘Amr Hafs Ibn ‘Umar Ibn ‘Abd al-‘Aziz al-Baghdadi, better known as Al-Duri (767-860 CE; 150-246 AH), was a significant figure in the transmission of the Qira'at, or methods of reciting the Qur'an. Of the seven canonical reciters, al-Duri was a transmitter for two entirely separate methods: that of Abu 'Amr ibn al-'Ala' and that of Al-Kisa'i. He was a direct disciple of the latter and an indirect disciple of the former due to a generational gap. al-Duri transmits Abu 'Amr's recitation through Abu Muhammad Yahya ibn al-Mubarak ibn a-Mughirah al-Yazidi (d. 202 AH). Learned men were said to ha
Abu 'Ali al-Khaiyat
Muslim writer
Al-Zubayr ibn Bakkar
Leading Arab Muslim historian and genealogist
Ibn Abi Asim
writer
'Anbasah ibn Ishaq al-Dabbi
provincial Abbasid governor
Abd al-Malik ibn Salih
Abbasid general and provincial governor (750–812)
Yazid ibn Mazyad al-Shaybani
Abbasid general and governor
An-Nadhar bin Syamil
astronomer, literary and linguist
Sulayman ibn Wahb
Iraqi poet
Sa'id ibn Makhlad
Abbasid vizier
Al-Qasim ibn Harun al-Rashid
Abbasid Prince and heir presumptive (born c.789)
Haytham ibn Khalid
shirvanshah
Muhammad al-Taqi
Ninth Ismaili Imam (790–840)
Jafar ibn Ali al-Hadi
Son of the tenth Shia Imam (c. 840–885)
Shu'ayb ibn Umar
Emir of Crete from c. 855 to c. 880
Al-Qasim ibn Ubayd Allah
abbasid Vizier and Official (901–904)
Nuʿaim ibn Hammād
Hadith compiler (died 843)
Al-Mufawwad
'''Ja'far ibn Ahmad al-Mu'tamid' (Arabic: جعفر بن أحمد المعتمد), better known by his laqab'' al-Mufawwiḍ ila-llāh (), was a son of the Abbasid caliph al-Mu'tamid and heir-apparent of the Caliphate from 875 until his sidelining by his cousin al-Mu'tadid in 891.
Yahya ibn Abd Allah
8th-century Alid and Zaydi leader
Muhammad ibn Ja'far al-Sadiq
9th-century self-declared Caliph of the Muslims
Yufirids
The Yuʿfirids () were an Islamic Himyarite dynasty that held power in the highlands of Yemen from 847 to 997. The name of the family is often incorrectly rendered as "Yafurids". They nominally acknowledged the suzerainty of the Abbasid caliphs. Their centres were Sanaa and Shibam Kawkaban. The Yuʿfirids followed Sunni Islam.
Alí ibn al-Fadl al-Qarmatí
Yemeni Isma'ili missionary (died 915)
Ubaydallah ibn al-Mahdi
Abbasid prince and governor (771–810/11)
Al-Fakihi
'''Abu 'Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Ishaq ibn al-'Abbas al-Fakihi''' (, born 215–220 AH; died 272-279 AH) was an eminent 9th-century historian and hadith scholar of Mecca. He narrated hadiths from preeminent hadith scholars such as Muhammad Ibn Ismail al-Bukhari, Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj, Abu Hatim al-Razi and Abu Zur'ah Jurjani.
Ahmad ibn Abi Du'ad
Chief judge of Abbasid Caliphate
Abu-l-Hàssan Alí ibn Muhàmmad ibn Mussa ibn al-Furat
10th century Abbasid vizier and Official
Muhammad ibn Ali al-Hadi
Shia imam
Zayd ibn Musa al-Kadhim
son of Musa al-Kazim
Q5640514
daughter of Muhammad al-Jawad
Muhammad ibn al-Zayyat
Abbasid vizier and court official (died c.847)
Ishaq ibn Isma'il
Emir of Tbilisi
Abu-Abd-Al·lah Úmar ibn Xuayb
Emir of Crete from c. 880 to c. 895
Al-Qasim ibn Isa
Arab Abbasid military commander
Muhammad ibn Shu'ayb al-Zarkun
fourth Emir of Crete
Sa'dun al Ruayni
Andalusi politician
Dawud ibn Yazid ibn Hatim al-Muhallabi
abbasid Provincial governor
Abu Amr Ishaq ibn Mirar al-Shaybani
muslim writer
Yaḥyā Ibn-Ḥakam al-Ġazāl
Abū Zakariyyāʾ Yaḥyā ibn Ḥakam al-Bakrī al-Jayyānī ( 790–864), nicknamed al-Ghazāl ('the gazelle'), was an Andalusi Arab poet and diplomat. He undertook two important missions for the Emirate of Córdoba, the first to the Byzantine Empire in 840 and the second to the Vikings in 845.
Yahya ibn Sa'id al-Harashi
abbasid Military Commander, Provincial Governor and official
Ahmad ibn Isa al-Shaybani
Bishr ibn Dawud al-Muhallabi
politician in Pakistan in the 9th century
Al-Fadl ibn Shadhan
Shia theologian and jurist
Abu al-Arab
arab Tunisian historian and poet (died 945)
Sayyid Ali Akbar
Sultan Saodat
Hasan al-Utrush
emir of Tabaristan, Zaydi Imam