Also known as Minhaj al-Siraj Juzjani
persischer Chronist
4 objects attributed to Minhādsch ad-Dīn Dschūzdschānī, held across European museums, libraries & archives · via Europeana
The Tabaqat-i Nasiri of Aboo 'Omar Minhaj al-Din 'Othman, ibn Siraj al-Din al-Jawzjani. Ed. by W. Nassau Lees and Mawlawis Khadim Hosain and 'Abd al-Hai
Ṭabakāt-i-Nāṣiri. a general history of the Muḥammadan dynasties of Asia, including Hindūstān : from A. H. 194 [810 A.D.], to A. H. 658 [1260 A. D.], and the irruption of the infidel Mughals into Islāam. by the Maulānā, Minhāj-ud-Dīn, Abū-'Umar-i-'Us̤mān. Translated from original Persian manuscripts by H. G. Raverty. Vol. 2
Abū ʿAmr Minhādsch ad-Dīn ʿUthmān ibn Sirādsch ad-Dīn Muhammad Dschūzdschānī (persisch ابو عمرو منهاج الدين عثمان بن سراج الدين محمد جوزجاني, DMG Abū ʿAmr Minhāǧ ad-Dīn ʿUṯmān ibn Sirāǧ ad-Dīn Muḥammad Ǧūzǧānī, auch kurz Minhadsch-i Siradsch genannt, * 1193 in Ghur, gest. in der zweiten Hälfte des 13. Jh. in Delhi) war ein persischer Chronist des 13. Jahrhunderts, dessen Familie aus Dschuzdschan stammte. Er diente unter anderem den Ghuriden, Nasriden und Delhi-Sultanen und verfasste bis 1260 das Werk Tabaqat-i Nasiri, das unter anderem eine wichtige Quelle zum Leben Dschingis Khans und der Geschichte der Mongolen ist.
Abstract from DBpedia / Wikipedia · CC BY-SA
via MusicBrainz · CC0
5 total works indexed
· 2020 · cited 7,749x
· 2005 · cited 5,574x
· 2023 · cited 3,768x
· 2017 · cited 2,868x
· 2002 · cited 2,541x
via Crossref · CC0
via Wikiquote · CC BY-SA
via Wikidata · CC0
Ṭabakāt-i-Nāṣiri. a general history of the Muḥammadan dynasties of Asia, including Hindūstān : from A. H. 194 [810 A.D.], to A. H. 658 [1260 A. D.], and the irruption of the infidel Mughals into Islāam. by the Maulānā, Minhāj-ud-Dīn, Abū-'Umar-i-'Us̤mān. Translated from original Persian manuscripts by H. G. Raverty. Vol. 1
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).