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Divisions of the world in Islam : ウィキペディア英語版 | Divisions of the world in Islam
The Arabic singular form ''dar'' (دار), translated literally, may mean "house", "abode", "structure", "place", "land", or "country". In Islamic jurisprudence it often refers to a part of the world. The idea of geographical divisions along religious lines i.e. the dur is not mentioned in the ''Quran''. The notions of "houses" or "divisions" of the world in Islam such as ''Dar al-Islam'' and ''Dar al-Harb'' does not appear in the Quran or the Hadith. Early Islamic jurists devised these terms to denote legal rulings for ongoing Muslim conquests almost a century after Muhammad. The first use of the terms was in Iraq by Abu Hanifa and his disciples Abu Yusuf and Al-Shaybani. Among those in the Levant, Al-Awza'i was leading in this discipline and later Shafi'i. ==Major religious divisions==
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