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Al Qaim
Al-Qaim ( Arabic : al-qa im, ) is an Arabic term meaning "one who rises, which is standing." It is the honorary nickname ( laqab ) gave several Muslim rulers of dynasties.
Characters named al-Qaim
- Al-Qaim bi-Allah'Amri sovereign Fatimids who ruled the Ifriqiya from 934 to 946
- Al-Qa'im twenty-sixth Caliph Abbasid to Baghdad from 1031 to 1075
- Al-Qa'im Abbasid Caliph of Cairo from 1451 to 1455
- Yahya II al-Qaim , Amir Hammudite of Malaga and Algeciras from 1039 to 1040
- Abu Abd Allah Muhammad al-Mahdi al-Qaim bi-Allah'Amri Sultan saadien prevailing over southern Morocco from 1511 to 1517.
- Siyyid Mirza Ali-Muhammad said Bb ( 1,819 - 1.85 thousand ), who claimed to be Al-Qaim Other
- Al-Qaim , district of the province of Al Anbar in Iraq
- Al-Qaim , the district capital of the eponymous province of Al Anbar in Iraq
See statement made by the Bb at his trial in Tabriz in 1848, reported by Nabil in his Chronicle-iA'am Nabil ', chapter 18, p. 298-300
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