LC control no. | n 80153725 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Fārābī |
Variant(s) | Alpharabius Alfarabius Abennasar Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad al-Fārābī Uzluk oğlu Farâbî Fārābī, Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad Abu Nasr Mukhammad alʹ-Farabi Farabi, Abu Nasr Mukhammad Abu-Nasr alʹ-Farabi Abū Naṣr Fārābī Alfarabi Alfārābī, Abu Nasr Abu Nasr Alfārābī Avennasar Abu Nasr Forobiĭ Форобий, Абу Наср Forobiĭ, Abu Nasr alʹ-Farabi Al-Faraby Абу Насър Мухаммад ибн Мухаммад ал-Фараби Abu Nasŭr Mukhammad ibn Mukhammad al-Farabi aл Фараби Abu Nasr Muhammet ibn Muhammet ibn Tarhan ibn Uzlug Faraby Faraby, Abu Nasr Muhammet ibn Muhammet ibn Tarhan ibn Uzlug Abū Naṣr Muḥammad bin Muḥammad bin Ṭarhkhān bin Ūzluġ al-Fārābī Fārābī, Abū Naṣr Muḥammad bin Muḥammad bin Ṭarhkhān bin Ūzluġ al- Phwarabi, Abu Nassr Pharabi פאראבי أبو نصر الفارابي الفارابي فارابي فرابي Farabîy Alʹ-Farabi, Abu Nasr |
Associated place | Baghdad (Iraq) |
Birth date | 0870~ |
Death date | 0950~ |
Place of death | Damascus (Syria) |
Profession or occupation | Muslim philosophers Philosophers Musicologists Science |
Special note | Non-Latin script references not evaluated. |
Found in | Der Musterstaat ... 1900. O logicheskom uchenii alʹ-Farabi, 1982: t.p. (alʹ-Farabi) p. 3 (Abu Nasr Mukhammad alʹ-Farabi; b. ca. 870; d. 950) Abu-Nasr alʹ-Farabi, 1982. Chāvūshī, J.Ā. Kitābshināsī-i tawṣīfī-i Abū Naṣr Fārābī, 1978. Aristotelian logic and the Arabic language in Alfarabi, 1990: CIP introd. (Abu Nasr Alfārābī; Alfarabius; Avennasar) Teori politik al-Farabi dan masyarakat Melayu, 1991: t.p. (Al-Farabi) p. xiv (Abu Nasr al-Farabi) p. 2 (real name: Muhammad) Fozil odamlar shaḣri, 1993: t.p. (Abu Nasr Forobiĭ) Dukhovnoe nasledie alʹ-Farabi, 2001: verso t.p. (Al-Faraby [in rom.]) Saz ylmy, 2006: t.p. (Abu Nasr Muhammet ibn Muhammet ibn Tarhan ibn Uzlug Faraby; Abū Naṣr Muḥammad bin Muḥammad bin Ṭarhkhān bin Ūzluġ al-Fārābī) Zindagīʻnāmah-i mashāhīr-i Īrān, 2007: p. 75-76, 82 (Abu Nassr Phwarabi [in rom.]; b. 839 AD.; d. 918 AD.) p. 4 of cover (Pharabi [in rom.]) Ming bir ruboiĭ, 2009: p. 18 (Abu Nasr Forobiĭ; AKA Abu Nasr Muḣammad ibn Muḣammad ibn Ŭzlugh Tarkhon Forobiĭ; b. 873; d. 950) Encyclopedia of Islam, viewed via the WWW December 13, 2012 (al-Fārābī, one of the most outstanding and renowned Muslim philosophers; is said to have died at the age of eighty or more in 339/950 in Damascus) Wikipedia, viewed December 13, 2012 (al-Farabi, c. 872 - between 14 December, 950 and 12 January, 951 in Damascus; spent almost his entire life in Baghdad) The Oxford Encyclopedia of African Thought, accessed November 1, 2014, via Oxford African American Studies Center database: (al-Farabi, Muhammad; Abu Nasr Muhammad ibn al-Farakh al-Farabi, or Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn Tarkhan ibn Uzalagh al-Farabi, or Alpharabius; philosopher, musicologist, physical scientist; born 0870 C.E. in Kazakhstan or Persia or Afghanistan; invented a number of musical instruments and his pure Arabian tone system is still used in Arab music; developed a philosophy of religion based on Alexandrian school, Aristotle, Plato; his education consisted of linguistic studies (Arabic, Turkish, and Persian), jurisprudence, and religious studies (the Hadith and the Qur'an), mathematics, philosophy, and music; accepted the position of Qadi (judge) in Bukhara; left for Egypt and Baghdad to further his linguistics studies (901 C.E.); invited to the Imami court of King Sayf al-Dawlah, the Hamdani ruler of Aleppo (942 or 943 C.E.) and was part of a ruler's internal circle; recognized by his peers for his mastery and originality in logic and philosophy; his fame spread throughout the Islamic world; died 0950 C.E. in Damascus, Syria) Felsefey Îslamîy, 2 015: title page (Farabîy) LC database, 15 Feb 2023: (hdg.: Alʹ-Farabi, Abu Nasr) |
Associated language | ara |