caliph
See also: Caliph
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Middle English calife, caliphe, from Old French caliphe, from Medieval Latin calipha, from Arabic خَلِيفَة (ḵalīfa, “caliph”) and خَلِيف (ḵalīf, “successor”).
Pronunciation
Noun
caliph (plural caliphs)
- The political leader of the Muslim world; the successor of the prophet Muhammad's political authority.
- 1837, Letitia Elizabeth Landon, Ethel Churchill, volume 2, pages 148-149:
- It carries us to the East, and the stately halls of the caliphs rise on the mind's eye; and we think over the thousand and one stories which made our childhood so happy, and stored up a world of unconscious poetry for our future years:...
- The Abbasid caliphs patronized art and science beside religious developments ushering in the Islamic Golden Age when their capital Baghdad began to flourish as a center of knowledge, culture and trade.
Derived terms
Translations
political leader of the Muslim world
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- English terms inherited from Middle English
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- Rhymes:English/eɪlɪf
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- en:Heads of state
- en:Islam