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  1. Vor 2 Tagen · Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan (1817–98), India’s greatest 19th-century Muslim leader, succeeded, in his Causes of the Indian Revolt (1873), in convincing many British officials that Hindus were primarily to blame for the mutiny.

  2. Vor 3 Tagen · In 1919, by the time he was 16, and still a modernist in mindset, he moved to Delhi and read books by his distant relative, the reformist Sayyid Ahmad Khan.

  3. reviews.history.ac.uk › review › 2224Reviews in History

    Vor 2 Tagen · Perhaps the most poignant example of a figure trying to make Anglo-Indian relations work was Sayyid Mahmood, whose father Sayyid Ahmad Khan had been a leading reformer and had founded Aligarh University. As Wilson explains, Sayyid Mahmood ‘argued that Anglo-Indian sociability could create the foundation for a virtuous from of ...

  4. Vor 4 Tagen · Eine Sprecherin des Generalbundesanwalts in Karlsruhe bestätigte am Samstag die Verlegung des Mannes ins Gefängnis, zuvor hatte der SWR berichtet. Dem 25-Jährigen wird Mord, versuchter Mord und...

  5. Vor 3 Tagen · Although influential Muslims such as Sayyid Ahmad Khan recognized the growing power imbalance and encouraged Muslims to seek European education and entry into the colonial civil service, they also realized that catching up to the more progressive and advantaged Hindus was an impossible task.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › JihadJihad - Wikipedia

    Vor einem Tag · Sayyid Ahmad Khan also argued jihad was limited to cases of oppression, and since the British Raj allowed freedom of religion, there was no need to wage jihad against the British. Instead, Khan formulated jihad as recovering past Muslim scientific progress to modernize the Muslim world.

  7. Vor 4 Tagen · T29 Sayyid Aḥmad II (III), 1485–1502, son of Aḥmad (T27); rival of Shaykh Aḥmad (T28), overran the Crimea as associate of Murtaḍā (T30) 1486, became associate of Shaykh Aḥmad by 1490, until they quarreled in 1501, last mentioned 1504.