Baghdadi
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Al-Baghdadi or just Baghdadi is an Arabic (also a Persian in case of Baghdadi) nesbat, meaning "from Baghdad". It is usually added at the end of names as a specifier.
People with the surname include:
- Wajih Baghdadi [1]
- Al-Khatib al-Baghdadi (392 AH-463 AH), Shafi'i scholar
- Hibat Allah Abu'l-Barakat al-Baghdaadi (1080-1164/1165 AD), physicist and philosopher
- Muwaffaq al-Din `Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi (d. 629/1231), physician who wrote al-Mujarrad li lughat al-hadith [2]
- Ibn Tahir al-Baghdadi, mathematician
- Ibn Sa'd al-Baghdadi
- Junayd Baghdadi (830-910 AH) was one of the great early mystics, or Sufis, of Islam
- Muhammad bin Hasan al-Baghdadi (d 1239) was the author of an early Arab cookbook
- Mahmud al-Alusi al-Baghdadi (1217 AH- 1270 AH)
- Khairuddin Abul Barakat No‘man bin Mahmud Al-Alusi Al-Hanafi Al-Baghdadi (d. 1317/1899) [3].
- Ahmad Al-Baghdadi a reformist Kuwaiti
- Imam Abu Ubaid Qasim Bin Salam Baghdadi(d224) [4]
- Muhammad ibn Sulayman alBaghdadi [5]
- Allamah Yusuf Shams ad-din al-Baghdadi, Ibn al-Jawzi's grandson [6]
- Ibn Khashab Baghdadi (d. 567 AH), wrote Taarikhe' Mawaleedul Aimmah wa Wafaatehim [7]
- Ibn Abi Salij Baghdadi (d. 326 AH), a contemporary of the deputies of Imam Mahdi, wrote Mawaleedo Wafaatul Aimmah [8]
- Allamah Murtada Baghdadi, wrote Hurmatu Halq al-Lahyah [9]
Places include:
- Baghdadi, Iraq
- Baghdadi, a neighborhood of Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan
Organizations include:
- Baghdadi Jews, one of 3 types of Jews in India
- Ile-Baghdadi Shahsavans, a confederation of Turkic tribes living in different areas of Markazi and Tehran provinces.