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Haydar |
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| Wikipedia articles | All pages beginning with Haydar |
| Look up Haydar in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Haydar (Arabic حيدر ) is one of many Arabic male given names for "lion", each denoting some aspect of the animal. Haider, Haidar, Hyder, Hydar and Heydar are variants of the transliteration. Among the people named so are:
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‘Alī ibn Abī Ṭālib was the cousin of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, Fourth Caliph and first Shi'a Imam. He is said to have been nicknamed Haydar by his mother for his shaggy head of hair and Haydar al-Karrār (Arabic حيدر الكرار) "Invincible Lion" by the Muslim warriors who followed him.
[[Hamza :
1- Captain Muhammad Sarwar (1910–July 27, 1948), 6/8 Punjab
2- Major Tufail Muhammad (1914–August 7, 1958), 1 Battlion East Bengal Regiment
3- Major Raja Aziz Bhatti (1928–September 10, 1965), 17 Punjab
4- Major Muhammad Akram (1938–1971), 4 FF
5- Pilot Officer Rashid Minhas (1951–August 20, 1971), PAF Training Squadron
6- Major Shabbir Sharif (1943–December 6, 1971), 6 FF
7- Jawan Sawar Muhammad Hussain (1949–December 10, 1971), 20 Lancers
8- Lance Naik Muhammad Mahfuz (1944–December 17, 1971), 15 Punjab
9- Captain Karnal Sher Khan (1970–July 5, 1999), 27 Sindh
10- Havaildar Lalak Jan (1967–July 7, 1999), 12 NLI.
It is the shortened version of the name of the Persian Sufi saint Qutb ad-Dīn Haydar, who died about 1221 CE/618 AH. Haydar - the Persian form of his name is Heydar - founded an order of mendicant dervishes known as the Haydariyya known for their celibacy and self-mortification through piercing their own bodies with iron rings.
Other people named "Haydar" include: