Muhammad Bin Qasim by Naseem Hijazi - Fateh e Hind

Naseem Hijazi is the author of the book Muhammad Bin Qasim Novel

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1.1
Android 4.4+
Everyone
2,104
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Android App Analysis and Review: Muhammad Bin Qasim by Naseem Hijazi - Fateh e Hind, Developed by Pak Appz. Listed in Education Category. Current Version Is 1.1, Updated On 23/07/2020 . According to users reviews on Google Play: Muhammad Bin Qasim by Naseem Hijazi - Fateh e Hind. Achieved Over 2 thousand Installs. Muhammad Bin Qasim by Naseem Hijazi - Fateh e Hind Currently Has 7 Reviews, Average Rating 3.9 Stars

Naseem Hijazi is the author of the book Muhammad Bin Qasim Novel. It is another great history book of Naseem Hijazi. Muhammad Bin Qasim was the military chief of Mohamed supporter forces who overcame Sindh in 712 A.D. He was the brother’s (sister’s) son of Hajjaj Bin Yousaf, the Mohamed supporter governor of Iraq. Hajjaj was a hugely respected military’s chief in addition.



The coming out on top of Sindh covered the way of important Mohamed supporter good things done in sub-continent. Muhammad Bin Qassim was great Mohamed supporter one respected for great acts. As a military chief, he met his very sad end in new living. He got placed over Raja Dahir of Sindh in the coastal areas of Sindh.

The book Muhammad Bin Qasim is a fiction story, but we can say it Muhammad Bin Qassim's history in Urdu. The book has in it the living go across, wars, and good things of Muhammad Bin Qasim. The writer described the existing wheeled machine with authoritative statements, directions which are trustable. He also told about the personal living, and God fear of Mohammad Bin Qasim.

Naseem Hijazi, the writer of book Muhammad Bin Qasim, was a great fiction writer and writer of history in Pakistan. He wrote many super hit books about the history of the Muslims and the Islam.

Muhammad bin Qasim al-Thaqafi (Arabic: محمد بن القاسم الثقفي‎, romanized: Muḥammad bin al-Qāsim al-Thaqafī; c. 695 – 715[1]), also known by the laqab (honorific epithet) of Imad ad-Din (Arabic: عماد الدين‎, romanized: ʿImād al-Dīn), was an Arab commander of the Umayyad Caliphate general, who, during the reign of Caliph al-Walid I (r. 705–715), led the Muslim conquest of Sindh and Multan (both in present-day Pakistan) from the third and the last Maharaja of the Brahmin dynasty, Raja Dahir in the battle of Aror. He was the first Muslim to have successfully invaded Sindh.

The campaign of Muhammad bin Qasim
Hajjaj had put more care and planning into this campaign than the second campaign. Al-Hajjaj gave Muhammad command of the expedition between 708 and 711, when Muhammad was only 15–17 years old, apparently because two previous Umayyad commanders had not been successful in punishing Sindh's ruler Raja Dahir for his failure to prevent pirates from disrupting Muslim shipping off the coast of Sindh. Al-Hajjaj superintended this campaign from Kufa by maintaining close contact with Muhammad in the form of regular reports for which purpose special messengers were deputed between Basra and Sindh. The army which departed from Shiraz under Muhammad consisted of 6,000 Syrian cavalry and detachments of mawali (sing. mawla; non-Arab, Muslim freedmen) from Iraq. At the borders of Sindh he was joined by an advance guard and six thousand camel cavalry and later, reinforcements from the governor of Makran were transferred directly to Debal (Daybul), at the mouth of the Indus, by sea along with five manjaniks (catapults). The army that eventually captured Sindh would later be swelled by the Gurjars and Meds as well as other irregulars who heard of the Arab successes in Sindh. When Muhammad passed through the Makran desert while raising his forces, he had to subdue the restive towns of Fannazbur and Arman Belah (Lasbela), both of which had previously been conquered by the Arabs.

The first town assaulted in Muhammad's Sindh campaign was Debal and upon the orders of al-Hajjaj, he exacted a retribution on Debal by giving no quarter to its residents or priests and destroying its great temple. From Debal, the Arab army then marched northeast taking towns such as Nerun and Sadusan (Sehwan) without fighting. One-fifth of the war booty including slaves were remitted to al-Hajjaj and the Caliph. The conquest of these towns was accomplished with relative ease; however, Dahir's armies being prepared on the other side of the Indus[a] had not yet been confronted. In preparation to meet them, Muhammad returned to Nerun to resupply and receive reinforcements sent by al-Hajjaj.
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