Maqsud Bin Uzun Hasan
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Maqsud Bin Uzun Hasan
Maqsud (also spelled Maqsood) (مقصود) is a given name. Notable people with the name include: * Maqsood Ahmed, Pakistani cricketer * Sayed Maqsood Hashemi, Afghan footballer * Maqsood Hussain, Pakistani field hockey player * Maqsood Rana, Pakistani cricketer * Ala Abdel Maqsud Muhammad Salim, citizen of Egypt who was held in extrajudicial detention in Guantanamo Bay * Maqsud Shah, Uyghur Khan or Prince of the Kumul Khanate from 1908 to 1930 * Maqsud-Ali Tabrizi, Iranian physician * Maqsudullah Maqṣūd Ullāh ibn Thanāʾ Ullāh ibn Ḥijr Ullāh al-Ghāzī ( ar, مقصود الله بن ثناء الله بن حجر الله الغازي; 1883–1961), or simply Maqsudullah ( bn, মকসুদুল্লাহ), was a Bengali Deob ..., Bengali Islamic scholar {{given name Pakistani masculine given names ...
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Maqsood Ahmed
Maqsood Ahmed (26 March 1925 – 4 January 1999) was a Pakistani cricketer who played in 16 Test matches from 1952 to 1955. He was educated at Islamia College, Lahore. Maqsood Ahmed was a useful all rounder in the first ever cricket team of Pakistan. Before the creation of Pakistan, he played for Southern Punjab in India, scoring 144 in his very first match. An aggressive hitter of the ball, Maqsood played a vital role in the recognition of Pakistan as test playing nation when he made 137 against the visiting MCC in 1951–52. A right-handed middle-order batsman, Maqsood was a hard hitter of the ball and is one of the Test cricketers whose highest score was 99, which he made in the Third Test against India in 1954–55. Though a brilliant batsman, his performance in Test matches was rather irregular because of his carefree attitude. In England in 1952 he became the first Pakistani to play as a professional cricketer. The English press dubbed him "Merry Max". He played 16 T ...
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Sayed Maqsood Hashemi
Sayed Maqsood Hashemi is an Afghan footballer who currently plays for Ordu Kabul F.C. football club in Afghanistan. He is also a player for the Afghanistan national football team; he has 2 goals. He wears number 6 and plays defensive midfielder position. External links

* * Afghan men's footballers 1984 births Living people Afghanistan men's international footballers Men's association football midfielders Footballers at the 2002 Asian Games Asian Games competitors for Afghanistan {{Afghanistan-footy-bio-stub ...
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Maqsood Hussain
Maqsood Hussain (born 10 April 1962, in Sialkot), is a Pakistani field hockey Field hockey is a team sport structured in standard hockey format, in which each team plays with ten outfield players and a goalkeeper. Teams must drive a round hockey ball by hitting it with a hockey stick towards the rival team's shooting ci ... player. He represented the Pakistan national team 38 times between 1981 and 1987, scoring 21 goals. He is the brother of Pakistan field hockey Captain Manzoor Hussain Junior. Maqsood Hussain and his two brothers, Manzoor Hussain Junior and Mahmood Hussain, represented Pakistan in 1984 Champions Trophy in Karachi in a match and made world record. References Field hockey players from Sialkot Pakistani male field hockey players Living people 1962 births {{Pakistan-fieldhockey-bio-stub ...
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Maqsood Rana
Maqsood Rana, (born 1 August 1972) is a former Pakistani cricketer who played single One Day Internationals for Pakistan in 1990. He is a son of former Pakistani cricket umpire Shakoor Rana and brother of Mansoor Rana, Azmat Rana was his uncle. In February 2021, he began to undertake coaching courses with the Pakistan Cricket Board The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) is a sports governing body for cricket in Pakistan responsible for controlling and organising all tours and matches undertaken by the Pakistan national cricket team. A member of the International Cricket Coun .... References External links * 1972 births Living people Pakistani cricketers Pakistan One Day International cricketers Lahore City A cricketers Lahore City cricketers National Bank of Pakistan cricketers Rawalpindi B cricketers Lahore Whites cricketers Pakistan University Grants Commission cricketers {{Pakistan-cricket-bio-1970s-stub ...
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Ala Abdel Maqsud Muhammad Salim
Allah Muhammed Saleem ''(also transliterated as Alaadinn Muhammad Salim)'' is a citizen of Egypt who was held in extrajudicial detention in the United States Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba. His Guantanamo Internment Serial Number was 716. Joint Task Force Guantanamo counter-terrorism analysts report that he was born on January 13, 1967, in Al-Bajoor, Egypt. Combatant Status Review A Summary of Evidence memo was prepared for his tribunal. The memo accused him of the following: On March 3, 2006, in response to a court order from Jed Rakoff the Department of Defense published a Summarized transcript from over 300 Tribunals. Saleem's transcript was not published on March 3, 2006. A three-page summarized transcript from the unclassified session of his Tribunal was published in September 2007, as part of his habeas corpus petition. Allah Muhammed Saleem v. George W. Bush A writ of habeas corpus, Allah Muhammed Saleem v. George W. Bush, was submitted on Allah Mu ...
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Maqsud Shah
Maqsud Shah (1864 - 1930) (Shah Mexsut, ) ( ug, مقصود شاه}), was the Uyghur Jasagh Prince (Qinwang) of the Kumul Khanate in China from 1882 to 1930, he was the final ruler of the Borjigid dynasty. Background Maqsud Shah was the Khan of Kumul from 1882 to 1930, and served as the eleventh generational ruler of the Khanate. Maqsud's family was descended from Chaghatai Khan and had ruled the area since the time of the Yuan dynasty, though by the 20th century all the other Khanates in Turkestan had disintegrated. Maqsud spoke Turkic in a Chinese accent and often wore Chinese clothing, and also spoke fluent Chinese. He reputedly drank copious amounts of alcohol and did not allow anyone to take pictures of him. Reign Maqsud Shah succeeded his uncle Muhammmad Shah in 1882 as ruler of the Kumul Khanate. The Khans were officially vassals of the Qing Dynasty, and every six years were required to visit Beijing to be a servant to the Emperor for a period of 40 days. Unlike the res ...
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Kumul Khanate
The Kumul Khanate was a semi-autonomous feudal Turkic khanate (equivalent to a banner in Mongolia) within the Qing dynasty and then the Republic of China until it was abolished by Xinjiang governor Jin Shuren in 1930. The Khanate was located in present-day Hami prefecture of Xinjiang. History The Khans of Kumul were direct descendants of the Khans of the Chagatai Khanate, and thus the last descendant of the Mongol Empire. The Ming dynasty established a tributary relationship with the Turpan Khanate, that put end to Kara Del in 1513 after its conquest by Mansur Khan in the Ming–Turpan conflict. The Khanate paid tribute to the Ming. The Turpan Khanate under Sultan Said Baba Khan supported Chinese Muslim Ming loyalists during the 1646 Milayin rebellion against the Qing dynasty. Beginning in 1647, after the defeat of the Ming loyalists, during which the Kumul Prince Turumtay was killed at the hands of Qing forces, Kumul submitted to the Qing and sent tribute. It came under Qin ...
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Maqsud-Ali Tabrizi
Maqsud Ali Tabrizi was a 17th-century Iranian physician in Mughal India. As indicated by his nisba, he was from Tabriz. He was a translator who worked at the request of the Mughal emperor Jahangir (who ruled 1605-1627 CE). He translated Arabic treatises into Persian, including the Arabic treatise on the lives and sayings of 34 pre-Islamic and 77 post-Islamic scholars and physicians, that were composed by al-Shahrazuri in 1282 CE. The National Library of Medicine has a copy of Maqsud Ali Tabrizi's Persian translation of this biographical dictionary which states that he began translating al-Shahrazuri's treatise in 1602CE, though other sources state that he undertook the translation in 1605CE at the request of Jahangir. According to some biographical sources, Tabrizi was a Sufi scholar who nonetheless became an influential figure at the court of the governor of Gujarat, whom he served many years before enemies intrigued against him and he was imprisoned in the fortress of Gwal ...
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Maqsudullah
Maqṣūd Ullāh ibn Thanāʾ Ullāh ibn Ḥijr Ullāh al-Ghāzī ( ar, مقصود الله بن ثناء الله بن حجر الله الغازي; 1883–1961), or simply Maqsudullah ( bn, মকসুদুল্লাহ), was a Bengali Deobandi Islamic scholar best known as the inaugural Pir of Talgasia Darbar Sharif. He was a disciple of Ashraf Ali Thanwi, and founded numerous ''qaumi madrasas'' in the Greater Barisal region. Early life and family Maqsudullah was born in 1883 to a Bengali Muslim family of ''Ghazis'' in the village of Talgasia, Jhalakathi, then located under the Backergunge District of the Bengal Presidency. His father, Moulvi Ghazi Sanaullah, died in 1898 whilst returning from the Hajj pilgrimage and so Maqsudullah was mostly raised by his mother, Amena Khatun, and his paternal grandfather, Moulvi Ghazi Hijrullah. Education Maqsudullah completed the memorisation of the Qur'an at an early age. His grandfather, Moulvi Ghazi Hijrullah, then took him to the ...
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