Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q2474573> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 56 of
56
with 100 triples per page.
- Q2474573 subject Q13281530.
- Q2474573 subject Q6490926.
- Q2474573 subject Q7144962.
- Q2474573 subject Q7410165.
- Q2474573 subject Q7484919.
- Q2474573 subject Q7695494.
- Q2474573 subject Q7825930.
- Q2474573 subject Q7905103.
- Q2474573 subject Q7905163.
- Q2474573 subject Q7996628.
- Q2474573 subject Q8362023.
- Q2474573 subject Q8363674.
- Q2474573 subject Q8653950.
- Q2474573 subject Q8736714.
- Q2474573 subject Q8864399.
- Q2474573 subject Q8978173.
- Q2474573 subject Q9710303.
- Q2474573 abstract "Muhammad Ma Jian (Gejiu, 1906 – Beijing, 1978) (Arabic: محمد ماكين الصيني Muḥammad Mākīn as-Ṣīnī; English translation: Muhammad Ma Jian the Chinese) was a Chinese Islamic scholar and translator. He is notable for translating the Qur'an into Chinese and stressing compatibility between Marxism and Islam.Born in Shadian village, Gejiu, Yunnan, Ma Jian went to Shanghai to pursue his studies in 1928. In 1931, he left China for Al-Azhar University in Cairo, Egypt as a member of the first group of government-sponsored Chinese students to study there. While in Cairo, he wrote a book in Arabic about Islam in China, and translated the Analects into Arabic. He returned to China in 1939. There he edited the Arabic-Chinese Dictionary and translated the Qur'an and other Islamic works. He studied under Imam Hu Songshan. He became a professor of Beijing University in 1946. In 1981, the China Social Science Press published his Chinese version of the Qur'an; an Arabic-Chinese bilingual version was later published by the Medina-based King Fahd Holy Qur'an Printing Press.".
- Q2474573 wikiPageExternalLink al-quran.info.
- Q2474573 wikiPageExternalLink informations_20070111120538.html.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q1016730.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q13281530.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q16952.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q173959.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q1931708.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q197836.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q2075910.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q276015.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q35484.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q428.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q43194.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q432.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q5924751.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q6490926.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q7144962.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q7410165.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q7484919.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q7695494.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q7825930.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q7850.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q79.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q7905103.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q7905163.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q7996628.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q8362023.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q8363674.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q85.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q8653950.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q8686.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q8736714.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q8864399.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q8978173.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q956.
- Q2474573 wikiPageWikiLink Q9710303.
- Q2474573 comment "Muhammad Ma Jian (Gejiu, 1906 – Beijing, 1978) (Arabic: محمد ماكين الصيني Muḥammad Mākīn as-Ṣīnī; English translation: Muhammad Ma Jian the Chinese) was a Chinese Islamic scholar and translator. He is notable for translating the Qur'an into Chinese and stressing compatibility between Marxism and Islam.Born in Shadian village, Gejiu, Yunnan, Ma Jian went to Shanghai to pursue his studies in 1928.".
- Q2474573 label "Muhammad Ma Jian".