- Yarshater,
Ehsan (ed.). Encyclopædia Iranica. Lewicki, T. (1960–2007). "al-
Ḳazwīnī". In Bearman, P.; Bianquis, Th.; Bosworth, C.E.; van Donzel, E.; Heinrichs...
- (1936), "al-
Ḳazwīnī",
Encyclopedia of Islām, p. 841. Ethé (1868), p. 297. Chalyan-Daffner (2013), p. 216 and note 199.
Streck (1936), "al-
Ḳazwīnī", Encyclopedia...
- Madagascar: 1019–1044.
University of
Chicago Press. Ibn Batuta, iv. 305ff
Kazwini, i. ~I9 seq. Pearson, Mike
Parker & Godden, K. (2002). In
search of the...
-
supposedly draws the
venom from the wound." 13th
century Persian/Iranian
writer Kazwini describes the snake-stone in his work Aja'ib al-Makhluqat as
being the...
- Routledge, p. 686, ISBN 9781135179670
Guest &
Ettinghausen (1961), p. 52. "al-
Ḳazwini", The
Encyclopaedia of Islām, vol. I, E. J.
Brill ltd., 1938, p. 68 Chalyan-Daffner...
- and the
pristis sea-monster of the same authorities, 200
cubits long; Al
Kazwini tells a
similar tale of a
colossal tortoise. Such
Eastern stories are probably...
- who
visited Kerala includes Sulaiman, Al Biruni,
Benjamin of Tuleda, Al
Kazwini,
Marco Polo,
Friar Odoric,
Friar Jord****, Ibn Battuta,
Abdur Razzak, Nicolo-Conti...
- and note 196
Streck (1936), "al-
Ḳazwīnī", Ency. of Islām, p. 841 Lane (1883), p. 107, note 2.
Streck (1936), "al-
Ḳazwīnī", Ency. of Islām, p. 844. The p****age...
- the king of the
confederacy as next in
eminence to the Balhara,
whereas Kazwini mentions a fort
named Taifand, the
location of the fort
agrees with the...
- the 5th‑magnitude 33 Hya (A Hydrae), were Ptolemy's Καμπή (Kampē); but
Kazwini knew them as ʽUḳdah, the Knot.
According to the
catalogue of
stars in the...