- Abū Mūsā Jābir ibn Ḥayyān (Arabic: أَبو موسى جابِر بِن حَيّان,
variously called al-Ṣūfī, al-Azdī, al-Kūfī, or al-Ṭūsī), died c. 806−816, is the purported...
-
Gebir is a long poem by the
English writer Walter Savage Landor. The poem was
first published anonymously in
English in July 1798,
before being revised...
- Içe de
Gebir (Arabic: عيسى بن جابر الشقوبي; Īsā ibn Jābir Al-Sheqoobi;
sometimes also
found as Isa, Iça, Içe, Yça, Yza, and Ysa, and last name can be...
-
Atbara Bab****a
Berber Buwaidhaa Delgo Dongola Ad-Damazin Ed
Dueim El Ait El
Gebir En
Nahud El-Obeid Er
Rahad Foro
Baranga Geneina Hala'ib
Hashabah `Iyāl Bakhīt...
-
statues of the
Argonath and
flows through the
dangerous rapids of Sarn
Gebir and over the
Falls of
Rauros into Gondor. Gondor's
border with
Rohan is...
-
revoke his
former praise for
Napoleon in
Gebir. In the same year he
published Poetry by the
Author of
Gebir which included the
narrative poems "Crysaor"...
- Abū Muḥammad Jābir ibn Aflaḥ (Arabic: أبو محمد جابر بن أفلح, Latin: Geber/
Gebir; 1100–1150) was an Arab
Muslim astronomer and
mathematician from Seville...
- of
Gundishapur into the
Arabic world. They
patronized scholars such as
Gebir and
Jabril ibn Bukhtishu. They are also
credited with the establishment...
-
referred to them as
kristianlar while the
Orthodox and
Catholics were
called gebir or kafir,
meaning "unbeliever". The
Bosnian Franciscans (and the Catholic...
-
Landor discovered the myth of
Gebir and
Queen Charoba, and
began work on
another long epic poem in
blank verse,
Gebir (1798). "The Phocæans" was first...