Gesudaraz I

Mir | میر
Syed Muhammad Hamza
Gesudaraz I
Born 371 AH | 981 AD
Died 430 AH | 1038 AD
Cause of death Poisoning
Resting place Sulaiman Mountains, Pakistan
Known for Progenitor or several Sayyid tribes, Precher of Islam
Movement Preacher of Zayd ibn Ali Revolution
Children

Mir Syed Ahmad Saifuddin

Mir Syed Muhammad Sani
Parent(s) Syed Abdul Ghaffar
Relatives

Syed Muhammad Zafar (Grandson)

Syed Muhammad Masood (Great-Grandson)

Syed Muhammad Hamza[1] Gesudaraz[2] known as Gesudaraz I is the progenitor of several Sayyid tribes in Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan and India.[3] He was the son of Syed Abdul Ghaffar. [4] He sided from Baghdad to Zhob near Sulaiman Mountains in 999 AD with his wife and two sons Syed Ahmad Saifuddin and Syed Muhammad Sani. Later his sons married to Pukhtun women and setteled among the areas under Kakar, Sherani and Karrani tribes.[5][6] The Arab tribes descended from Gesudaraz I sons are now a day Mashwanis, Sayyids in Wardag, Hani and Storyani .[1][7][8][2][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18]

References

  1. 1 2 Kirmani, Attaullah. روضہ الاحباب. ایفه ستوریانی و مشوانی و وردگ و هنی از نسل چهار فرزندان سید محمد گیسودرازند.
  2. 1 2 NimatUllah خواجہ خواجہ نعمت اللہ ہروی (1613). تاریخ خان جھانی مخزن افغانی Tarikh-i-khan jahani wa makhzan-i-Afghani (PDF). pp. 648–649.
  3. شاہ, عمر خطاب. خطاب مشوانی.
  4. شاہ, سید یوسف (1930). حالات مشوانی. لاہو، پنجاب- پاکستان: محمدی پریس. pp. 101–103.
  5. بنوری, قطب الاقطاب شیخ سید آدم. نکات الاسرار.
  6. الحسینی, میر سید ثاقب عماد. گلدستۂ عقائد و حقائق روحانی.
  7. Khan, Sher Muhammad (1895). تواریخ خوشید جھان. Lahore: Islamia Press. p. 309.
  8. "شجره ارتباطی اولاد حضرت قیس عبدالرشید با اولاد پیامبر اسلام(ص) - نقش طایفه مرادقلی و تیره های وابسته در انقلاب و دفاع مقدس". پارسی بلاگ (in Persian). Retrieved 2017-01-26.
  9. Dorn, Bernhard (1829). History of the Afghans (2 ed.). p. 56-57.
  10. Henry, Walter Bellew (1862). Journal of a Political Mission to Afghanistan in 1857, Under Major Lumsden: With an Account of the Country and People. National Library of the Netherlands: Elder Smith, 1862.
  11. Balfour, Edward (1885). The Cyclopædia of India and of Eastern and Southern Asia: Commercial, Industrial and Scientific, Products of the Mineral, Vegetable, and Animal Kingdoms, Useful Arts and Manufactures, Volume 2. India: B. Quartitch, 1885. p. 215.
  12. کرمانی, شاہ عطااللہ. روضہ الاحباب.
  13. Gandapur, Sher Muhammad Khan (1894). تواریخ خورشید جھاں. Lahore: Islamiya Kutab. pp. 275–309.
  14. (Pakistan), Baluchistan (1979). Balochistan Through the Ages: Tribes. Nisa Traders : sole distributors Gosha-e-Adab.
  15. Khān, Muḥammad Ḥayāt (1981). Afghanistan and Its Inhabitants. Sang-e-Meel Publications.
  16. Bellew, Henry Walter (1862). Journal of a Political Mission to Afghanistan, in ,1857 Under Major (now Colonel) Lumsden: With an Account of the Country and People. Orient Research Centre.
  17. (Pakistan), Baluchistan (1907). Baluchistan District Gazetteer Series: Quetta-Pishin. printed at Bombay Education Society's Press.
  18. Khalil, Malik Muhammad. Tribe Khalil & The Brighten Persons Of Khalil: Tribe Khalil, famous people of tribe khalil (in Arabic). AttaUrRehman.


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