92 relations: Abd al-Aziz, Abdullah al-Mahdi Billah, Aghmat, Al-Bakri (crater), Almoravid dynasty, Andalusian Mosque, Aoudaghost, Arab Agricultural Revolution, Arab slave trade, Architecture of Africa, Atiq Mosque, Awjila, Awjila, Azougui, Bagai, Bakri, Banu Midrar, Barghawata, Böszörmény, Book of Roads and Kingdoms, Book of Roads and Kingdoms (al-Bakrī), Carthage amphitheatre, Domenico and Francesco Pizzigano, Dubai, Essaouira, Essouk, Fatimid architecture, Gao, Gao Empire, Ghana Empire, Great Mosque of Kairouan, Great Mosque of Mahdiya, Guinea (region), History of architecture, History of Dubai, History of Marrakesh, History of Timbuktu, Hungarian prehistory, Ibn Hajar al-Haytami, Ibrahim ibn Yaqub, Ibrahim II of Ifriqiya, Islamic architecture, Khalyzians, Kingdom of Nekor, Koumbi Saleh, Ksar es-Seghir, List of craters on the Moon: A–B, List of geographers, List of Muslim geographers, List of Muslim historians, List of people with craters of the Moon named after them, ..., List of pre-modern Arab scientists and scholars, Mali Empire, Maridi Arabic, Muhammad al-Idrisi, Musa bin Nusayr, Ouadane, Ounga, Tunisia, Phoenician language, Pisan–Genoese expeditions to Sardinia, Pre-imperial Mali, Precolonial Mauritania, Punic language, Sa'sa', Salīhids, Senegal, Senegal River, Sijilmasa, Siwa Oasis, Siyer-i Nebi, Soninke people, Soninke Wangara, Souira Guedima, Sufes, Taghaza, Tolga, Algeria, Tower of Babel, Trade route, Tronja Mosque, Tunisian Arabic, Tunka Manin, Ubayd Allah, Varieties of Arabic, Vistulans, Waggag ibn Zallu al-Lamti, William McGuckin de Slane, Yahya Ibn Ibrahim, Zafra, Zaynab an-Nafzawiyyah, 1014, 1094, 11th century, 11th century in science. Expand index (42 more) »
Abd al-Aziz
Abd al-Aziz (عبد العزيز., DMG: ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz), frequently also transliterated Abdul Aziz, is a male Muslim given name and in modern usage, surname.
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Abdullah al-Mahdi Billah
Abu Muḥammad ʿAlī / ʿAbd Allāh al-Mahdi Billah (873 – 4 March 934) (أبو محمد عبد الله المهدي بالله), was the founder of the Ismaili Fatimid Caliphate, the only major Shi'a caliphate in Islam, and established Fatimid rule throughout much of North Africa, Hejaz, Palestine and the Levant.
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Aghmat
Aghmat (Berber: Aɣmat, pronounced locally Ughmat, Uɣmat) was an important commercial medieval Berber town in mid-southern Morocco.
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Al-Bakri (crater)
Al-Bakri (البكري) is a small lunar impact crater on the northwest edge of Mare Tranquillitatis and is named after the Spanish Arab geographer and historian Abu Abdullah al-Bakri.
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Almoravid dynasty
The Almoravid dynasty (Imṛabḍen, ⵉⵎⵕⴰⴱⴹⴻⵏ; المرابطون, Al-Murābiṭūn) was an imperial Berber Muslim dynasty centered in Morocco.
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Andalusian Mosque
Andalusian Mosque (Masjid al-Andalusiyyin) is a mosque in Fes el Bali, the old medina quarter of the city of Fez, Morocco.
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Aoudaghost
Aoudaghost (also transliterated as Awadaghust, Awdughast, Awdaghusht and Awdhaghurst) is a former Berber town in Hodh El Gharbi, Mauritania.
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Arab Agricultural Revolution
The Arab Agricultural Revolution is the transformation in agriculture from the 8th to the 13th century in the Islamic region of the Old World.
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Arab slave trade
The Arab slave trade was the practice of slavery in the Arab world, mainly in Western Asia, North Africa, the Horn of Africa, Southeast Africa and Europe.
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Architecture of Africa
The architecture of Africa, like other aspects of the culture of Africa, is exceptionally diverse.
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Atiq Mosque, Awjila
The Atiq Mosque (also called the Great Mosque, or al-Kabir mosque) (عتیق مسجد) is a mosque in the oasis village of Awjila, in the Sahara desert of the Cyrenaica region of eastern Libya.
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Awjila
Awjila (Berber: Awilan, Awjila, Awgila; أوجلة; Latin: Augila) is an oasis town in the Al Wahat District in the Cyrenaica region of northeastern Libya.
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Azougui
Azougui (or Azuggi, آزوكي) was a town in north western Mauritania, lying on the Adrar Plateau, north west of Atar.
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Bagai
Bagai was a Roman–Berber city in the province of Africa Proconsularis.
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Bakri
Bakri may refer to.
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Banu Midrar
Banu Midrar or Midrarids (Medran ⵎⴻⴷⵔⴰⵏ) was a Berber dynasty that ruled Tafilalt.
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Barghawata
The Barghawatas (also Barghwata or Berghouata) were a group of Berber tribes on the Atlantic coast of Morocco, belonging to the Masmuda confederacy.
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Böszörmény
Böszörmény, also Izmaelita (Hysmaelita / Ishmaelites) or Szerecsen (Saracens), is a name for the Muslims who lived in the Kingdom of Hungary in the 10–13th centuries.
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Book of Roads and Kingdoms
Book of Roads and Kingdoms or Book of Highways and Kingdoms (كتاب المسالك والممالك, Kitāb al-Masālik wa'l-Mamālik) is the name given to several medieval Arabic language texts dealing with geography.
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Book of Roads and Kingdoms (al-Bakrī)
Book of Roads and Kingdoms or Book of Highways and Kingdoms (rtl, Kitāb al-Masālik wa'l-Mamālik) is the name of an eleventh-century geography text by Abu Abdullah al-Bakri.
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Carthage amphitheatre
The Carthage Amphitheatre was a Roman amphitheatre constructed in the first century CE in the city of Carthage, Tunisia.
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Domenico and Francesco Pizzigano
Domenico and Francesco Pizzigano, known as the Pizzigani brothers, were 14th-century Venetian cartographers.
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Dubai
Dubai (دبي) is the largest and most populous city in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
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Essaouira
Essaouira (الصويرة; ⵎⵓⴳⴰⴹⵓⵔ, Mugadur), formerly known as Mogador, is a city in the western Moroccan economic region of Marrakesh-Safi, on the Atlantic coast.
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Essouk
Essouk (Arabic: السوق) is a commune and small village in the Kidal Region of Mali.
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Fatimid architecture
The Fatimid architecture that developed in the Fatimid Caliphate (909–1167 CE) of North Africa combined elements of eastern and western architecture, drawing on Abbasid architecture, Byzantine, Ancient Egyptian, Coptic architecture and North African traditions; it bridged early Islamic styles and the medieval architecture of the Mamluks of Egypt, introducing many innovations.
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Gao
Gao is a city in Mali and the capital of the Gao Region.
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Gao Empire
The Gao Empire precedes that of the Songhai Empire in the region of the Middle Niger.
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Ghana Empire
The Ghana Empire (700 until 1240), properly known as Awkar (Ghana or Ga'na being the title of its ruler), was located in the area of present-day southeastern Mauritania and western Mali.
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Great Mosque of Kairouan
The Great Mosque of Kairouan (جامع القيروان الأكبر), also known as the Mosque of Uqba (جامع عقبة بن نافع), is a mosque in Tunisia, situated in the UNESCO World Heritage town of Kairouan.
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Great Mosque of Mahdiya
The Great Mosque of Mahdiya (الجامع الكبير في المهدية) is a mosque that was built in the tenth century in Mahdia, Tunisia.
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Guinea (region)
Guinea is a traditional name for the region of the African coast of West Africa which lies along the Gulf of Guinea.
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History of architecture
The history of architecture traces the changes in architecture through various traditions, regions, overarching stylistic trends, and dates.
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History of Dubai
The first human settlement in the history of Dubai was in approximately 3000 BCE, when the area was inhabited by nomadic cattle herders.
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History of Marrakesh
The history of Marrakesh, a city in southern Morocco, stretches back nearly a thousand years.
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History of Timbuktu
The following is a history of the city of Timbuktu, Mali.
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Hungarian prehistory
Hungarian prehistory (magyar őstörténet) spans the period of history of the Hungarian people, or Magyars, which started with the separation of the Hungarian language from other Finno-Ugric or Ugric languages around, and ended with the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin around.
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Ibn Hajar al-Haytami
Shibab al-Dīn Abū al-ʿAbbās Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad ibn ʿAlī ibn Hajar al-Haytamī al-Makkī al-Ansārī known as Ibn Hajar al-Haytami al-Makki (ابن حجر الهيتمي المكي) was a famousArendonk, C. van; Schacht, J..
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Ibrahim ibn Yaqub
Ibrahim ibn Yaqub (961–62; sometimes Ibrâhîm ibn Ya`qûb al-Tartushi or al-Ṭurṭûshî; also Abraham ben Jacob) was a 10th-century Hispano-Arabic, Sephardi Jewish traveller, probably a merchant, who may have also engaged in diplomacy and espionage.
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Ibrahim II of Ifriqiya
Abu Ishaq Ibrahim II ibn Ahmad (27 June 850 – 23 October 902) was the ninth Aghlabid emir of Ifriqiya.
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Islamic architecture
Islamic architecture encompasses a wide range of both secular and religious styles from the early history of Islam to the present day.
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Khalyzians
The Chalyzians or Khalyzians (Arabic: Khalis, Khwarezmian: Khwalis, Byzantine Greek: Χαλίσιοι, Khalisioi, Magyar: Káliz) were a people mentioned by the 12th-century Byzantine historian John Kinnamos in Halych.
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Kingdom of Nekor
The Kingdom of Nekor (Berber: ⵜⴰⴳⵍⴷⵉⵜ ⵏ ⵏⴽⴽⵓⵔ (Tageldit n Nekkur); إمارة بني صالح) was an emirate centered in the Rif area of present-day Morocco.
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Koumbi Saleh
Koumbi Saleh, sometimes Kumbi Saleh is the site of a ruined medieval town in south east Mauritania that may have been the capital of the Ghana Empire.
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Ksar es-Seghir
Ksar es-Seghir or Ksar Sghir or al-Qasr al-Seghir (l-qṣər ṣ-ṣġir.), is a small town on the Mediterranean coast in the Jebala region of northwest Morocco, between Tangier and Ceuta, on the right bank of the river of the same name.
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List of craters on the Moon: A–B
The list of approved names in the Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature maintained by the International Astronomical Union includes the diameter of the crater and the person the crater is named for.
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List of geographers
This list of geographers is presented in English alphabetical transliteration order (by surnames).
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List of Muslim geographers
The following is a non-exhaustive list of Muslim geographers.
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List of Muslim historians
The following is a list of Muslim historians writing in the Islamic historiographical tradition, which developed from hadith literature in the time of the first caliphs.
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List of people with craters of the Moon named after them
The following is a list of people whose names were given to craters of the Moon. The list of approved names in the Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature maintained by the International Astronomical Union includes the person the crater is named for.
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List of pre-modern Arab scientists and scholars
This is a list of Arab scientists and scholars from the Muslim World and Spain (Al-Andalus) who lived from antiquity up until the beginning of the modern age, consisting primarily of scholars during the Middle Ages.
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Mali Empire
The Mali Empire (Manding: Nyeni or Niani; also historically referred to as the Manden Kurufaba, sometimes shortened to Manden) was an empire in West Africa from 1230 to 1670.
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Maridi Arabic
Maridi Arabic was a possible Arabic pidgin apparently spoken in the upper Nile valley around 1000 CE.
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Muhammad al-Idrisi
Abu Abdullah Muhammad al-Idrisi al-Qurtubi al-Hasani as-Sabti, or simply al-Idrisi (أبو عبد الله محمد الإدريسي القرطبي الحسني السبتي; Dreses; 1100 – 1165), was an Arab Muslim geographer, cartographer and Egyptologist who lived in Palermo, Sicily at the court of King Roger II.
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Musa bin Nusayr
Musa bin Nusayr (موسى بن نصير Mūsá bin Nuṣayr; 640–716) served as a governor and general under the Umayyad caliph Al-Walid I. He ruled over the Muslim provinces of North Africa (Ifriqiya), and directed the Islamic conquest of the Visigothic Kingdom in Hispania (Spain, Portugal, Andorra and part of France).
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Ouadane
Ouadane or Wādān (وادان) is a small town in the desert region of central Mauritania, situated on the southern edge of the Adrar Plateau, 93 km northeast of Chinguetti.
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Ounga, Tunisia
Ounga (Younga or Jounga), is an archaeological site on the Mediterranean coast of Tunisia, located south of Sfax in the Tunisian Sahel.
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Phoenician language
Phoenician was a language originally spoken in the coastal (Mediterranean) region then called "Canaan" in Phoenician, Hebrew, Old Arabic, and Aramaic, "Phoenicia" in Greek and Latin, and "Pūt" in the Egyptian language.
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Pisan–Genoese expeditions to Sardinia
In 1015 and again in 1016 forces from the ''taifa'' of Denia, in the east of Muslim Spain (al-Andalus), attacked Sardinia and attempted to establish control over it.
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Pre-imperial Mali
Pre-imperial Mali refers to the period of history before the establishment of the Mali Empire, a pre-colonial African empire located mostly in present-day Mali, in 1235.
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Precolonial Mauritania
Precolonial Mauritania, lying next to the Atlantic coast at the western edge of the Sahara Desert, received and assimilated into its complex society many waves of Saharan migrants and conquerors.
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Punic language
The Punic language, also called Carthaginian or Phoenicio-Punic, is an extinct variety of the Phoenician language, a Canaanite language of the Semitic family.
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Sa'sa'
Sa'sa' (سعسع, סעסע) was a Palestinian village, located 12 kilometres northwest of Safed that was depopulated by Israeli forces during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war.
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Salīhids
The Salīḥids, also known simply as Salīḥ or by their royal house, the Zokomids (transliterated from Greek to Arabic as Ḍajaʿima) were the dominant Arab foederati of the Byzantine Empire in the 5th century.
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Senegal
Senegal (Sénégal), officially the Republic of Senegal, is a country in West Africa.
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Senegal River
The Senegal River (نهر السنغال, Fleuve Sénégal) is a long river in West Africa that forms the border between Senegal and Mauritania.
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Sijilmasa
Sijilmasa (سجلماسة; also transliterated Sijilmassa, Sidjilmasa, Sidjilmassa and Sigilmassa) was a medieval city and trade entrepôt at the northern edge of the Sahara Desert in Morocco.
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Siwa Oasis
The Siwa Oasis (واحة سيوة, Wāḥat Sīwah) is an urban oasis in Egypt between the Qattara Depression and the Great Sand Sea in the Western Desert, nearly 50 km (30 mi) east of the Libyan border, and 560 km (348 mi) from Cairo.
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Siyer-i Nebi
The Siyer-i Nebi (سیر نبی) is a Turkish epic about the life of Muhammad, completed around 1388, written by Mustafa son of Yusuf of Erzurum, known as al-Darir, a Mevlevi dervish on the commission of Sultan Berkuk, the Mamluk ruler in Cairo.
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Soninke people
The Soninke, also called Sarakole, Seraculeh, or Serahuli, are a West African ethnic group found in eastern Senegal and its capital Dakar, northwestern Mali and Foute Djalon in Guinea, and southern Mauritania.
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Soninke Wangara
The Wangara (also known as Wakore, Wankori, Ouankri, Wangarawa) were Soninke clans specialized in Silent Trade, scholarship from the University of Timbuktu and a type of Sharia law called the Suwarian Tradition.
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Souira Guedima
Souira Guedima, formerly known as Aguz, is a Moroccan town 36 km south of Safi, at the mouth of the Tensift River on the Atlantic seacoast.
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Sufes
Sufes was a town in the late Roman province of Byzacena, which became a Christian bishopric that is included in the Catholic Church's list of titular sees.
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Taghaza
Taghaza (also Teghaza) is an abandoned salt-mining centre located in a salt pan in the desert region of northern Mali.
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Tolga, Algeria
Tolga (طولقة) is a municipality in Biskra Province, Algeria.
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Tower of Babel
The Tower of Babel (מִגְדַּל בָּבֶל, Migdal Bāḇēl) as told in Genesis 11:1-9 is an origin myth meant to explain why the world's peoples speak different languages.
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Trade route
A trade route is a logistical network identified as a series of pathways and stoppages used for the commercial transport of cargo.
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Tronja Mosque
The Tronja Mosque is a Tunisian mosque, located in the Tronja area, which is a part of the Bab Souika suburb, in the north of the medina of Tunis.
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Tunisian Arabic
Tunisian Arabic, or Tunisian, is a set of dialects of Maghrebi Arabic spoken in Tunisia.
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Tunka Manin
Tunka Manin (1010–1078) was a ruler of the Ghana Empire who reigned from 1062 to 1076 C.E..
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Ubayd Allah
Ubayd Allah (عبيد الله), also spelled or transliterated Obaidullah, Obaydullah, Obeidallah, or Ubaydullah, is a male Arabic given name that means "little servant of God".
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Varieties of Arabic
There are many varieties of Arabic (dialects or otherwise) in existence.
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Vistulans
The Vistulans, or Vistulanians (Wiślanie), were an early medieval West Slavic tribe inhabiting western part of modern Lesser Poland.
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Waggag ibn Zallu al-Lamti
Waggag Ibn Zallu al-Lamti (died 11th-century in Aglu near Tiznit, Morocco) was a Moroccan Maliki scholar and jurist who lived in the 11th-century.
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William McGuckin de Slane
William McGuckin (also Mac Guckin and MacGuckin), known as Baron de Slane (Belfast, Ireland, 12 August 1801 - Paris, France, 4 August 1878) was an Irish orientalist.
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Yahya Ibn Ibrahim
Yahya Ibn Ibrahim (c. 440/1048)Levtzion and Hopkins, Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West African History (Cambridge, 1981) was a leader of the Godala tribe.
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Zafra
Zafra is a town situated in the Province of Badajoz (Extremadura, Spain), and the capital of the comarca of Zafra - Río Bodión.
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Zaynab an-Nafzawiyyah
Zaynab an-Nafzāwiyyah (Berber: ⵣⵉⵏⴱ ⵜⴰⵏⴼⵣⴰⵡⵜ (Zineb Tanefzawt), زينب النفزاوية) (fl. 1075), was a Berber woman of influence in the early days of the Almoravid Berber empire which gained control of Morocco, Algeria, and parts of Spain.
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1014
Year in topic Year 1014 (MXIV) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.
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1094
Year 1094 (MXCIV) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.
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11th century
The 11th century is the period from 1001 to 1100 in accordance with the Julian calendar in the Common Era, and the 1st century of the 2nd millennium.
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11th century in science
This is a summary of the 11th century in science and technology.
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Redirects here:
Abu 'Ubayd 'Abd Allah al-Bakri, Abu 'Ubayd al-Bakri, Abu Abdullah Al-Bakri, Abu Abdullah Al-Bekri, Abu Abdullah al-Bakri, Abū 'Ubayd 'Abd Allāh al-Bakrī, Abū ʿUbayd al-Bakrī, Abū ʿUbayd ʿAbdallāh ibn ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz ibn Muḥammad al-Bakrī, Al Bakri, Al bakri, Al-Bakrī, Al-Bekri, El Bekri.
References
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Bakri