Mukhtasar Al-Akhdari (English)

Mukhtasar Al-Akhdari (English)

App Name Mukhtasar Al-Akhdari (English)
Genre
Size https://www.66xz.com/apps/live_wallpaper/
Latest Version 1
MOD Info Premium Unlocked
Get it On Google Play
Download XAPK(32.6 MB)

Mukhtasar al-Akhdari: THE FIQH OF THE ACTS OF WORSHIP ACCORDING TO THE MALIKI...

-Mukhtasar al-Akhdari: THE FIQH OF THE ACTS OF WORSHIP ACCORDING TO THE MALIKI SCHOOL OF ISLAMIC LAW.

-The understanding of the acts of worship according to the Maliki school of Islamic law. Imam al-Akhdari . He is an Algerian scholar whose full name is Abū Yazīd ʿAbdur Raḥmān bin Muḥammad al-Ṣaghīr bin Muḥammad bin ʿĀmir. He is most commonly known as "al-Akhḍarī." He followed the Mālikī school in fiqh and the Ashʿarī school in creed. He is considered to be from amongst the great scholars of Islam and the distinguished scholars of Algeria in the 10th century Hijra.

What's New in the Latest Version 1.0

Last updated on Jul 17, 2024

- Arabic+English Version
- Bug Fixes

Mukhtasar Al-Akhdari

Introduction

Mukhtasar Al-Akhdari is a strategy board game that originated in the Middle East. It is played on an 8x8 checkered board with 16 pieces per player. The objective of the game is to capture all of your opponent's pieces or to block them from being able to move.

Setup

The game is played on a standard 8x8 chessboard. Each player has 16 pieces, which are placed on the first two ranks of the board. The pieces are arranged as follows:

* 1 King

* 1 Queen

* 2 Rooks

* 2 Knights

* 2 Bishops

* 8 Pawns

Gameplay

Players take turns moving one piece at a time. Pieces can move in different ways depending on their type.

* King: The king can move one square in any direction.

* Queen: The queen is the most powerful piece. It can move any number of squares along a rank, file, or diagonal.

* Rook: The rook can move any number of squares along a rank or file.

* Knight: The knight moves in an "L" pattern. It can move two squares in one direction and then one square perpendicularly.

* Bishop: The bishop can move any number of squares diagonally.

* Pawn: Pawns normally move one square forward, but they can move two squares forward on their initial move. Pawns capture diagonally forward.

Capture

When a piece lands on a square occupied by an opponent's piece, the opponent's piece is captured and removed from the board.

Special Rules

* Castling: The king and one of the rooks can move in a special move called castling. In castling, the king moves two squares towards a rook, and the rook then jumps over the king.

* En passant: If a pawn advances two squares from its starting position and lands beside an opponent's pawn, the opponent has the option of capturing the first pawn "en passant," as if it had only moved one square forward.

* Promotion: If a pawn reaches the opposite side of the board, it can be promoted to any other piece (a queen, rook, bishop, or knight) of the same color.

Winning

The game is won by the player who captures all of their opponent's pieces or blocks them from being able to move.

Mukhtasar al-Akhdari: THE FIQH OF THE ACTS OF WORSHIP ACCORDING TO THE MALIKI...

-Mukhtasar al-Akhdari: THE FIQH OF THE ACTS OF WORSHIP ACCORDING TO THE MALIKI SCHOOL OF ISLAMIC LAW.

-The understanding of the acts of worship according to the Maliki school of Islamic law. Imam al-Akhdari . He is an Algerian scholar whose full name is Abū Yazīd ʿAbdur Raḥmān bin Muḥammad al-Ṣaghīr bin Muḥammad bin ʿĀmir. He is most commonly known as "al-Akhḍarī." He followed the Mālikī school in fiqh and the Ashʿarī school in creed. He is considered to be from amongst the great scholars of Islam and the distinguished scholars of Algeria in the 10th century Hijra.

What's New in the Latest Version 1.0

Last updated on Jul 17, 2024

- Arabic+English Version
- Bug Fixes

Mukhtasar Al-Akhdari

Introduction

Mukhtasar Al-Akhdari is a strategy board game that originated in the Middle East. It is played on an 8x8 checkered board with 16 pieces per player. The objective of the game is to capture all of your opponent's pieces or to block them from being able to move.

Setup

The game is played on a standard 8x8 chessboard. Each player has 16 pieces, which are placed on the first two ranks of the board. The pieces are arranged as follows:

* 1 King

* 1 Queen

* 2 Rooks

* 2 Knights

* 2 Bishops

* 8 Pawns

Gameplay

Players take turns moving one piece at a time. Pieces can move in different ways depending on their type.

* King: The king can move one square in any direction.

* Queen: The queen is the most powerful piece. It can move any number of squares along a rank, file, or diagonal.

* Rook: The rook can move any number of squares along a rank or file.

* Knight: The knight moves in an "L" pattern. It can move two squares in one direction and then one square perpendicularly.

* Bishop: The bishop can move any number of squares diagonally.

* Pawn: Pawns normally move one square forward, but they can move two squares forward on their initial move. Pawns capture diagonally forward.

Capture

When a piece lands on a square occupied by an opponent's piece, the opponent's piece is captured and removed from the board.

Special Rules

* Castling: The king and one of the rooks can move in a special move called castling. In castling, the king moves two squares towards a rook, and the rook then jumps over the king.

* En passant: If a pawn advances two squares from its starting position and lands beside an opponent's pawn, the opponent has the option of capturing the first pawn "en passant," as if it had only moved one square forward.

* Promotion: If a pawn reaches the opposite side of the board, it can be promoted to any other piece (a queen, rook, bishop, or knight) of the same color.

Winning

The game is won by the player who captures all of their opponent's pieces or blocks them from being able to move.