8 December، 2022
Administrative divisions of India during the Abbasid era (132-656 AH / 749-1258 AD)
The Department of History at the College of Education for Humanities at the University of Mosul discussed
PhD thesis on:
Administrative divisions of India during the Abbasid era (132-656 AH / 749-1258 AD)
On Thursday 8/12/2022, part of it was attended by Prof. Dr. Hazem Thanoun Ismail Al-Sabawi, Dean of the Faculty, and a number of faculty members.
The thesis submitted by PhD student Safwan Khaled Yahya Al-Hamdani
In the history section are the most prominent kingdoms of the Indian subcontinent, the kingdoms of the islands of the Indian Sea, independent islands, territorial and territorial divisions, and the administrative cities of Sindh.
The study touched on the most important independent Arab emirates that were established in the countries of India, such as the Mahani, Hebaria, Ma’daniya, the Emirate of Bani Sama and Qazdar, and the kingdoms of India such as the Kingdom of Qanuj, Maharaj, Kashmir and Gujarat, and other independent kingdoms such as the Kingdom of Java, the Kingdom of Debjat and the Kingdom of Qamar.
The thesis aims to monitor the historical transformations on the administrative departments and how they are managed by the Indians themselves or by the Muslim Arabs residing in India after the Islamic conquest and to explain the political and military influences on those administrative departmentsChaired the discussion committee
Prof. Dr. Nawfal Mohamed Nouri, and the membership of
Prof. Dr. Fathi Salem Hamidi, Prof. Dr. Safwan Taha Hassan, Assistant Prof. Dr. Ali Hussein Ali, Assistant Prof. Dr. Intisar Nassif Shaker
Under the supervision and membership of Prof. Dr. Sufyan Yassin Ibrahim