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Masud
Masud (, ) is a given name and a surname, commonly found in the Middle East and Asia. It has a variety of spellings including Masoud, Massoud, Massoude, Massudeh, Masood, Masʽud, Masud, Mashud, Messaoud, Mesut, Mesud, or Mosād. People with the name Masud include: People with the given name Masud * Masud Sabri, Uyghur governor of Xinjiang * Masud Jani, 13th century governor of Bengal * Masud Khan, British psychoanalyst * Masud Ghnaim, an Israeli Arab politician * Masud Minhas, Indian field hockey player People with the surname Masud * Ghiyath Ad-din Masud, King Mesud II * Ala ud din Masud, Ruler of the Mamluk dynasty (Delhi) * Faisal Masud, Medical doctor * Khalid Masud, Pakistani scholar * Mitty Masud, Pakistan Air Force personnel * Mohammad Masud, Iranian journalist * Muhammad Khalid Masud, Director of an Islamic Research Institute * Naiyer Masud Naiyer Masud (1936 – 24 July 2017) was an Indian Urdu scholar and short story writer. Early life and education Masud was ...
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Masud Khan
Mohammed Masud Raza Khan (21 July 1924 - 7 June 1989) was a Pakistani-British psychoanalyst. His training analyst was Donald Winnicott. Masud Raza Khan was a protege of Sigmund Freud's daughter Anna Freud, and a long-time collaborator with Donald Winnicott. Early life Named Ibrahim at birth, Khan was born in Jhelum in the Punjab, then part of British India, now in Pakistan. His father, Fazaldad (c. 1846-1943), was a Shiite Muslim of peasant birth who had ben richly rewarded by the British for the family's support and military service during the conquest of the region, and became a wealthy landowning zamindar, adopting the name "Khan Bahadur Fazaldad Khan". He farmed, specialized in the breeding and sale of horses to the British in the army and for polo. He married four times (his first wife was a cousin, from whom he divorced due to infertility; the third wife died at a fairly young age), and had nine sons and several daughters. His fourth wife, whom he married when he was 76 an ...
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Masud Ghnaim
Masud (, ) is a given name and a surname, commonly found in the Middle East and Asia. It has a variety of spellings including Masoud, Massoud, Massoude, Massudeh, Masood, Masʽud, Masud, Mashud, Messaoud, Mesut, Mesud, or Mosād. People with the name Masud include: People with the given name Masud * Masud Sabri, Uyghur governor of Xinjiang * Masud Jani, 13th century governor of Bengal * Masud Khan, British psychoanalyst * Masud Ghnaim, an Israeli Arab politician * Masud Minhas, Indian field hockey player People with the surname Masud * Ghiyath Ad-din Masud, King Mesud II * Ala ud din Masud, Ruler of the Mamluk dynasty (Delhi) * Faisal Masud, Medical doctor * Khalid Masud, Pakistani scholar * Mitty Masud, Pakistan Air Force personnel * Mohammad Masud Mohammad Masud (1905–1948) was an Iranian journalist and writer. He published some books and launched a weekly newspaper, '' Mard-i Imruz'' (Persian: ''The Man of Today''). He was an ardent critic of the Pahlavi rule a ...
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Masud Sabri
Masud Sabri, also known as Masʿūd Ṣabrī ( ug, مەسئۇت سابرى, مسعود صبري; zh, s=麦斯武德·沙比尔, t=麥斯武德·沙比爾, p=Màisīwǔdé·Shābì'ěr; 1886–1952), was an ethnic Uyghur politician of the Republic of China who served as the Governor of Sinkiang during the Ili Rebellion. He received education at Kulja and Istanbul and was a Pan-Turkist. Chiang Kai-shek appointed him the first non-Han governor of any Chinese province during the twentieth century. Education After attending University of Istanbul and learning medicine, Sabri returned to Sinkiang to become a pharmacist. Career Governor of Sinkiang Yang Zengxin jailed Masud Sabri for pan turkist activities and then deported him from the province. Masud supported the First East Turkestan Republic while based at Aqsu with Mahmud Sijan. After it was crushed by the 36th Division (National Revolutionary Army) Masud fled to British India and then to Nanking, where he joined the Kuomint ...
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Naiyer Masud
Naiyer Masud (1936 – 24 July 2017) was an Indian Urdu scholar and short story writer. Early life and education Masud was born in Lucknow and spent nearly all his life there, working until his retirement as a Professor of Persian at Lucknow University. Masud was the son of Masud Hassan Rizvi, also a Lucknow University Professor of Persian, a famed scholar of dastaan who was awarded the 'Padma Shri' for 'Literature and Education' in 1970. He is the elder brother of the noted satirist Azhar Masud. Career and honors Masud is the author of many scholarly books and translations (notably of Kafka), but is best known for his short stories, collected in the volumes Ganjifa, Simiya, Itr-e-kaafoor, and Taoos Chaman Ki Myna. For the last, he was awarded the 2001 Urdu prize of the Sahitya Akademi and the Saraswati Samman The Saraswati Samman is an annual award for outstanding prose or poetry literary works in any of the 22 languages of India listed in Schedule VIII of the Constit ...
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Ala Ud Din Masud
Ala ud-Din Masud Shah (died 10 June 1246, ) was the seventh sultan of the Delhi Sultanate. Life He was the son of Rukn ud-Din Firuz (1236), son of Sultan Illtutmish and Shah Turkan and the nephew of Sultan Raziyyat (1236–40). After his predecessor and uncle Muiz ud-Din Bahram was murdered by the army in 1242 after years of disorder, the chiefs chose for him to become the next ruler of Delhi. However, he was more of a puppet for the chiefs and did not actually have much power or influence in the government. Instead, he became infamous for his fondness for entertainment and wine. Like his predecessor, he was considered "incompetent and worthless." By 1246, the chiefs became upset with his increasing hunger for more power in the government, and executed him, replacing him with Nasiruddin Mahmud Shah. Coins Gold, Silver and Billon coins are known for Ala ud-Din Masud Shah. Gold and silver coins were issued from Lakhnau and Delhi. Billon coins were struck from Budaun and ...
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Faisal Masud
Faisal Masud ( ur, ) (16 October 1954 – 16 August 2019) was a renowned Pakistani endocrinologist. He served as the founding principal at Services Institute of Medical Sciences affiliated with the Services Hospital in Lahore, Pakistan. He also served as the vice-chancellor of the University of Health Sciences and a vice-chancellor of the King Edward Medical University, Lahore (January 2013–February 2017). Education and career Faisal obtained his MBBS degree in 1976, from Nishtar Medical College, Multan. He became a member of Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh, Glasgow and London in 1982 and a Fellow of Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh in 1998, where his area of interest was endocrinology. He started his teaching career from Allama Iqbal Medical College in 1982 and then moved on to teach at King Edward Medical College, Lahore, and Services Institute of Medical Sciences, Lahore. He was passionate in his belief that the medical colleges and universities should ...
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Mohammad Masud
Mohammad Masud (1905–1948) was an Iranian journalist and writer. He published some books and launched a weekly newspaper, '' Mard-i Imruz'' (Persian: ''The Man of Today''). He was an ardent critic of the Pahlavi rule and Ahmad Qavam. Masud was assassinated in February 1948. Biography Masud was born in 1905. He went to Europe to study journalism in 1935 when he was awarded a government scholarship and returned to Iran in 1938 following his graduation. He applied for a state institution for employment, but his application was denied. After this incident he became a critic of Reza Shah. In 1942 Masud published an autobiography entitled ''Guha'i keh dar Jahannam Miruyand'' (Persian: ''Flowers which Grow in Hell''). Next year he published another book, ''Bahar-i Umr'' (Persian: ''The Spring of Life''). In 1942 he also started his journalism career launching a weekly newspaper entitled ''Mard-i Imruz'' in which he published critical articles and political cartoons which targeted Pr ...
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Khalid Masud
Allama Khalid Masud (16 December 1935 – 1 October 2003), was a Muslim scholar of Pakistan. He spent the major part of his life with Moulana Amin Ahsan Islahi. He conveyed ideas and thoughts of his teacher and Imam Farhi to general public. He wrote a number of books and articles and delivered lectures on Islam, science and other subjects. By profession he was a chemical engineer but he spent his life in serving Farahi's school of thought. He worked as in charge of Idara Taddabur e Qur'an o Hadith. Early life Allama Khalid Masud was born in Lilla Town, Jhelum District, Pakistan. He belonged to a religious family having association with sufi school of thought, Naqshbandi Mujaddadi. But he and his father Saif U Rehman both were not under influence of sufism and they concentrated mainly towards Qur'an and Sharia. His father Saif U Rehman completed his education in 1926 from Oriental College Lahore where he learnt Arabic as major subject. He was a scholarly person. He kept hi ...
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Mesud II
Ghiyath al-Dīn Me’sud ibn Kaykaus or Mesud II ( 1ca, مَسعود دوم, ''Ghiyāth ad-Dīn Mas'ūd bin Kaykāwūs'' ( fa, غياث الدين مسعود بن كيكاوس) bore the title of Sultan of Rûm at various times between 1284 and 1308. He was a vassal of the Mongols under Mahmud Ghazan and exercised no real authority. History does not record his ultimate fate. He was the last of the Seljuks. Reign Masud II was the eldest son of Kaykaus II. He spent part of his youth as an exile in the Crimea and lived for a time in Constantinople, then the capital of the Byzantine Empire. He appears first in Anatolia in 1280 as a pretender to the throne. In 1284 the new Ilkhan Sultan Ahmed deposed and executed the Seljuq sultan Kaykhusraw III and installed Masud in his place. Ahmad's successor, Arghun, divided the Seljuq lands and granted Konya and the western half of the kingdom to the deposed sultan's two young sons. Masud invaded with a small force, had the two boys killed, and ...
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Muhammad Khalid Masud
Muhammad Khalid Masud (born 15 April 1939) is the Director General of Islamic Research Institute, International Islamic University, Islamabad, Pakistan. The President of Pakistan appointed Mr. Masud as an Ad Hoc Member of Shariat Appellate Bench of the Supreme Court on 18 October 2012. On 1 November 2012, he took the oath administered by Chief Justice of Pakistan as an Ad Hoc Member of Shariat Appellate Bench of Supreme Court of Pakistan. Formerly he was Chairman (2004–2010) of the Council of Islamic Ideology in Pakistan.Profile of Muhammad Khalid Masud
Salzburg Global Seminar (Austria) website, Retrieved 19 November 2022


Early life

Masud obtained his PhD in

Masud Jani
Masud Jani ( fa, , bn, মাসুদ জানী) was the Governor of Bengal during 1247-1251 CE. Life Masud was the son of a previous Bengali governor Alauddin Jani. Masud Jani was appointed Governor of Bengal after the death of the rebellious Tughlaq Tamar Khan in 1247 CE. He adopted the title ''Malik al-Muluk ush-Sharq'' (King of the Eastern kings) after defeating an Odia garrison at Lakhnauti, the old Capital of the Province, however mutinies among his men and Tamar Khan's loyalists prevented him from consolidating on this victories. In 1249, he renovated a sacred building in Gangarampur, Old Malda which was originally built during the reign of Sultan Iltutmish. Jani is referred to in the inscription as "The Great King, Jalal al-Haqq wad-Din, King of the Eastern kings, Masud Shah Jani" ( ar, ملك المعظم جلال الحق والدين ملك الملوك الشرق مسعود شاه جاني, Malik al-Muʽaẓẓam Jalāl al-Ḥaqq wad-Dīn Malik al-Mulūk ash-S ...
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Massoud
Massoud (, ) is a given name and a surname, commonly found in the Middle East and Asia. It has a variety of spellings including Masoud, Masud, Massoude, Massudeh, Masood, Masʽud, Masud, Mashud, Messaoud, Mesut, Mesud, or Mosād. People with the name Massoud include: People with the given name Massoud * Massoud Abdelhafid, Libyan retired army general * Massoud Achkar (1956–2021), Lebanese politician * Massoud Amin (born 1961), American professor of engineering * Massoud Behnoud, Iranian journalist * Massoud Borazani, 1st president of Iraqi Kurdistan * Massoud Fouladi, Iranian-born ophthalmologist * Massoud Hamid, Kurdish Syrian photographer * Massoud Hossaini (born 1981), Afghan-born photojournalist * Massoud Keshmiri, Iranian militant and undercover politician * Massoud Khalili (born 1950), Afghan diplomat * Massoud Pedram, Iranian American computer engineer * Massoud Rajavi, Iranian militant politician * Massoud Shafiee, Iranian lawyer People with the surname Massou ...
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