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Asian Journal of Education and Social Studies, 2019
: The learning institutes and centers in the Pre-Islam and Early Islamic era were really remarkable and might be countless. This study shows the development of Madrasah in the 11th century from various learning institutes and centers in the past.
Syed Mahbubul Alam Al-Hasani
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: The learning institutes and centers in the Pre-Islam and Early Islamic era were really remarkable and might be countless. This study shows the development of Madrasah in the 11th century from various learning institutes and centers in the past.
Syed Mahbubul Alam Al-Hasani
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Early Christian Grave Monuments and Ecclesiastical Developments in 11th-Century Sweden
Medieval Archaeology, 2019THE EMERGENCE of churchyards is one of the most significant transformations of the landscape during the conversion to Christianity. This article examines changes in burial and commemorative practices during the 11th century, based on early Christian ...
Cecilia Ljung
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The Origin and Power of Music According to the 11th-Century Islamic Philosopher Ibn Sīnā
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 2019The question of the origin of music and its powers has always fascinated philosophers and scientists. Here we present a close reading of the view offered by the Persian Muslim philosopher and scientist Ibn Sīnā, also known as Avicenna (980–1037). We draw
R. Granot, Nabil Shair
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The Balkans, Early 11th Century
2001On Simeon’s death in 927, the Bulgarian throne passed to his son Petŭr I (927–69). Petŭr was a pious Orthodox Christian and well-intentioned ruler, but personally he was weak. His piety helped end the incessant warfare with Byzantium instigated by his father.
Dennis P. Hupchick, Harold E. Cox
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Eastern Europe, Mid-11th Century
2001The death of King Vaclav III (1305–6) ended the Přemsyl dynasty and the Czech kings’ hold on the Polish throne, which had begun in 1290 with Vaclav II (1278–1305). An interregnum followed in Bohemia that ended when the Czech nobility elected as king John of Luxemburg (1310–46), who was forced to grant them a charter guaranteeing their rights and ...
Dennis P. Hupchick, Harold E. Cox
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A 5th/11th century chronicler from Tripoli
Libyan Studies, 2022AbstractIt is generally believed that Tripolitanian historiography began with the chronicle of Muḥammad b. Ghalbūn in the first half of the 12th century AH/18th century AD, before expanding in the 13th/19th. This pattern tends to forget that other players – unfortunately now lost – predated that modern historical writing.
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2018
Perhaps the most important philosopher of the Nyāya school, Udayana authored several works in the eleventh century which brought to a close the long-standing debate between Nyāya and Buddhist philosophers. The realist Nyāya philosophers had argued for the existence of an enduring self (ātman), a thesis denied by their Buddhist opponents.
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Perhaps the most important philosopher of the Nyāya school, Udayana authored several works in the eleventh century which brought to a close the long-standing debate between Nyāya and Buddhist philosophers. The realist Nyāya philosophers had argued for the existence of an enduring self (ātman), a thesis denied by their Buddhist opponents.
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Byzantine Adab and Falsafah in 11th Century Antioch
Journal of Arabic Literature, 2022Abstract Both medieval Arab historians and modern Byzantinists have generally ignored the Arabophone cultural life of Antioch during its period under Byzantine rule from 969–1084 CE, preferring to equate Christian rule with Greek culture. Nevertheless, lay intellectuals closely connected to the Melkite Patriarchate of Antioch were active in promoting ...
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