[1] Praise and gratitude.
[2] Is-Haq Efendi of Harput passed away in 1309 [A.D. 1891].
[3] Most beloved one, darling.
[4] Unity of Allâhu ta’âlâ.
[5] Khayr-ud-dîn Pasha passed away in 1307 [A.D. 1889].
[6] Ibni Is-hâq passed away in 151 [A.D. 768], in Baghdad.
[7] Muhammad Wâqidî passed away in 207 [A.D. 822].
[8] Tabarî, (Abû Ja’far Muhammad bin Jerîr), passed away in 310 [A.D. 923], in Baghdad.
[9] Ibni Sa’d Muhammad Basrî passed away in 230 A.H.
[10] Please see the book Why Did They Become Muslims?, available from Hakîkat Kitâbevi, Fâtih, Istanbul, Turkey.
[11] Ahmed Cevdet Pasha, the editor of Qisâs-i Enbiyâ, passed away in 1312 [A.D. 1894].
[12] Heraclius died in 20 [A.D. 641].
[13] Muhammad Tabarî passed away in Baghdad in 310 [A.D. 923].
[14] Sylvestre died in 1003 [A.D. 1594].
[15] Se’âdet-i Ebediyye (Endless Bliss) was partly translated and published in fascicles in English.
[16] NORTON, Andrews, American Biblical scholar and educator. He was born in 1201 [A.D. 1786]. He died on September 18, 1853. He graduated from Harward in 1804, and after studying theology was a tutor in Bowdoin College in 1809. He returned to Harvard, in 1811, as a mathematical tutor there; and became, in 1813, librarian of the university and lecturer on Biblical criticism and interpretation. From 1819 to 1830 he was Dexter professor of Sacred literature. He was among the most eminent exponents of unitarianism [which rejected trinity and upheld the belief in the Unity of Allah], equally strong in his protests against Calvinism and the naturalistic theology represented by Theodore Parker. He published A Statement of Reasons for not Believing the Doctrins of Trinitarians (1833).” [Encyclopedia Americana, Volume: 20, p. 464].