Sufian (disambiguation)

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Sufian is a city which is the capital of Sufian District, Iran.

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Mus or MUS may refer to:

Vali or Wali can refer to:

Sufyan al-Thawri was a Tābi‘ al-Tābi‘īn Islamic scholar, jurist, and founder of the Thawri madhhab. He was also a great hadith compiler (muhaddith) and was known as one of the Eight Ascetics.

The Musannaf of Abd al-Razzaqal-Sanʿani is an early hadith collection compiled by the eighth-century Yemeni scholar ʽAbd al-Razzaq al-Sanʽani. As a collection of the musannaf genre, it contains over 18,000 traditions arranged in topical order.

Abd al-Razzaq ibn Hammam ibn Nafi' al-San'ani, was an eighth-century Yemeni hadith scholar who compiled a hadith collection known as the Musannaf of Abd al-Razzaq.

Turp may refer to:

Bagh may refer to:

Beri may refer to:

Kalla may refer to:

Ayan may refer to:

Taj al-Din may refer to:

Abū Muḥammad Sufyān ibn ʽUyaynah ibn Maymūn al-Hilālī al-Kūfī was a prominent eighth-century Islamic religious scholar from Mecca. He was from the third generation of Islam referred to as the Tābiʽu al-Tābiʻīn, "the followers of the followers". He specialized in the field of hadith and Qur'an exegesis and was described by al-Dhahabī as shaykh al-Islam—a preeminent Islamic authority. Some of his students achieved much renown in their own right, establishing schools of thought that have survived until the present.

Ahrar may refer to:

Sakhr or Sakher may refer to:

The Thawri school was a short-lived school of Fiqh. Its founder was Sufyan Al-Thawri, a great 8th century scholar, jurist and hadith compiler.

Fath may refer to:

Sufian is a village in Sumay-ye Jonubi Rural District, Sumay-ye Beradust District, Urmia County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 732, in 112 families.

Muhammad Shah (1702–1748) was Mughal emperor from 1719 to 1748.

Sufyan is an Arabic name.

Abū Sufyān Wakīʿ ibn al-Jarrāḥ ibn Malīḥ al-Ruʾāsī al-Kilābī al-Kufī (745/47–812) was a prominent hadith scholar based in Kufa. He was one of the principal teachers of the major Sunni Muslim jurist Ahmad ibn Hanbal.