- pronunciation: [ɣaːziː],
plural ġuzāt) is an
individual who parti****ted in
ghazw (غزو, ġazw),
meaning military expeditions or raids. The
latter term was...
- of
raiding other tribes, caravans, or
settlements is
known in
Arabic as
ghazw. Historically, the
Bedouin engaged in
nomadic herding,
agriculture and sometimes...
- the
teachings of the Quran.
Ghazi was an
individual who parti****ted in
ghazw,
meaning military expeditions or raiding. The
title of "Grand Mufti" (Arabic:...
-
Tommi P. (2013). "The
Saracen Raid of Rome in 846: An
Example of
Maritime Ghazw". In
Sylvia Akar;
Jaakko Hämeen-Anttila; Inka Nokso-Koivisto (eds.). Travelling...
-
Italian mercenary bands. From the
territory conquered in
Anatolia during the
ghazw emerged the
Ottoman Empire.
Tradition has it that its founder,
Osman I,...
- by not
practicing sodomy." Al-
Ghazw al-Fikri (The
Intellectual invasion), Cairo: Sar al-Urubah, 1966 Al-Naksa wa al-
Ghazw al-Fikri (The
Naksa and the Intellectual...
-
Constantinople in 1261,
Sardis and
surrounding areas fell
under the
control of
Ghazw emirs. The
Cayster valleys and a fort on the
citadel of
Sardis were handed...
-
across the
Sudan region, and in Chad
there was a
tradition of
slave raids (
ghazw)
under the
Ouaddai and
Baguirmi which persisted well into the 20th century...
-
Against Italian Colonialism 1911-1943",
Markaz Jihad al
Libiyeen dhid al
Ghazw al Itali, 1988.
Attilio Teruzzi, "Cirenaica Verdi",
translated by Kalifa...
- cut the sea
lanes in the Atlantic. In the
south the
Saracens were
making Ghazw or raids.
These campaigns in
southern Europe caused Languedoc, Provence...