entity_citations: CIT_ISL_ALLAH_QURAN
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| citation_id | entity_id | source_id | work_title | locus | quote | translator | translation_year | source_url | evidence_grade | evidence_note | verified_on | verify_method | display_order | needs_review | review_reason | original_text_url |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CIT_ISL_ALLAH_QURAN | ENT_ISL_ALLAH | SRC_QURAN | The Qur’an | The Qur’an | To Moslems he is, of course, the prophet par excellence, and the Koran is regarded by the orthodox as nothing less than the eternal utterance of Allah. The eulogy pronounced by Carlyle on Muhammed in Heroes and Hero Worship will probably be endorsed by not a few at the present day. The extreme contrary opinion, which in a fresh form has recently been revived1 by an able writer, is hardly likely to find much lasting support. | J. M. Rodwell | 1861 | https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/2800 | primary-verbatim | 2026-06-18 | name-anchored (note-keyword scored) + substring gate; locus per attestation | 1 | 1 | English translation (Rodwell, chronological sura order) located by name; the cited sura:ayah is the standard reference — consult the Arabic (linked). | https://quran.com/ |