1471/09/21 Hijri to Gregorian Date

Hijri date of 21 Ramadan 1471 AH in Gregorian

Well, the Hijri date 21 Ramadan 1471 corresponds to the Gregorian date Tuesday, 22 June 2049. This date lies in the ninth month of the Hijri year 1471 AH, which is Ramadan of 1471 AH. Both this Hijri and Gregorian date occur on the single day that is Tuesday without any doubt. The Arabic date 1471/09/21 is calculated using the Umm Al-Qura calendar and the sighting of the moon. One thing to remember is that this Arabic date may occur on different Gregorian date depending upon the region and country and obviously the moon.

If you are still not sure about the date then you can use our Arabic date converter.

Convert 2049/06/22 to Hijri Date

The following is the conversion of the Gregorian date 22 June 2049 to its equivalent Arabic date.

1471/09/21

Tuesday, 21 Ramadan 1471 AH

Convert 1471/09/21 to Gregorian Date

The following is the conversion of the Arabic date 21 Ramadan 1471 AH to its equivalent Gregorian date.

2049/06/22

Tuesday, 22 June 2049

Qur'an Ayah of the day, 21 Ramadan 1471

إِنَّ جَهَنَّمَ كَانَتْ مِرْصَادًۭا

Lo! hell lurketh in ambush,

Surah An-Naba(78:21)

Hadith of the day, 21 Ramadan 1471

Sahih al-Bukhari

Call to Prayers (Adhaan)

Chapter: The Prophet's Sunna (legal way) for the sitting in the Tashah-hud [in the Salat (prayer)].

Narrated Muhammad bin `Amr bin `Ata':

I was sitting with some of the companions of Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) and we were discussing about the way of praying of the Prophet. Abu Humaid As-Sa`idi said, "I remember the prayer of Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) better than any one of you. I saw him raising both his hands up to the level of the shoulders on saying the Takbir; and on bowing he placed his hands on both knees and bent his back straight, then he stood up straight from bowing till all the vertebrate took their normal positions. In prostrations, he placed both his hands on the ground with the forearms away from the ground and away from his body, and his toes were facing the Qibla. On sitting In the second rak`a he sat on his left foot and propped up the right one; and in the last rak`a he pushed his left foot forward and kept the other foot propped up and sat over the buttocks."

Sahih al-Bukhari 828