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Inayat Khan, 1882-1927 (Personal Name)

Preferred form: Inayat Khan, 1882-1927
Used for/see from:
  • Inayat Khan, Hazrat, 1882-1927
  • Khan, Inayat, 1882-1927
  • Khan, Hazrat Inayat, 1882-1927
  • Hazrat Inayat Khan, 1882-1927
  • Inoi︠a︡tkhon, Ḣazrati, 1882-1927
  • Ḣazrati Inoi︠a︡tkhon, 1882-1927
  • Inayat Khan, Pir-o-Murshid, 1882-1927

Do not confuse with his son: Inayat Khan, Pir Vilayat (n 82158466 )

The mysticism of sound and music, 1996: CIP t.p. (Hazrat Inayat Khan)

Tarbii︠a︡t, 2010: t.p. (Ḣazrati Inoi︠a︡tkhon) p. 3 (b. 1882 ; d. 1927)

Biography of Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan, 1979.

Sufi qtrly, Mar. 1927 p. 180 (Hazrat Pir-o-mirshid is a title)

Wikipedia, June 7, 2013 (Inayat Khan; born July 5, 1882 in Vadodara, Gujarat; died February 5, 1927 in Delhi; founder of The Sufi Order in the West in 1914 (London) and teacher of Universal Sufism. He initially came to the West as a Northern Indian classical musician, having received the honorific "Tansen" from the Nizam of Hyderabad, but he soon turned to the introduction and transmission of Sufi thought and practice. Later, in 1923, the Sufi Order of the London period was dissolved into a new organization, formed under Swiss law, called the "International Sufi Movement". Branches of Inayat Khan's movement can be found in the Netherlands, France, England, Germany, the United States, Canada, Russia and Australia)

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