- began.
While Armenian kanuns now
employ only
equidistant half-tones and
Arabic qanuns exact quarter-tones as a result,
Turkish kanun-makers went so far as...
-
would issue kanuns via
royal decrees known as “Ferman”. When a
collection of
kanuns large enough is
compiled and published, it is
called a
kanun-name (literally:...
- The
Kanun (also Gheg Albanian: Kanû/-ja,
other names include Albanian: doke, zakon, venom, usull, itifatk, adet, sharte, udhë, rrugë) is a set of Albanian...
- Look up qanun or
kanun in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Qanun or
Kanun may
refer to:
Qanun (instrument), a
large zither pla**** in and
around the Middle...
- the Sultan's
powers to change. Yet an area of
distinct law
known as the
Kanuns (قانون,
canonical legislation) was
dependent on Suleiman's will alone, covering...
- invention. The
reformist period peaked with the Constitution,
called the
Kanûn-u Esâsî. The empire's
First Constitutional era was short-lived. The parliament...
-
derive from
ancient Illyrian tribal laws. Lekë
Dukagjini Shtjefën Gjeçovi
Kanuns of
Albania Rushani 1997, pp. 137–140. Elezi, Ismet. "Zhvillimi historik...
- of this
tradition is the
principle of hospitality, as
articulated in the
Kanun,
which guides various aspects of
social interactions and practices. Particularly...
-
Constitution of the
Ottoman Empire (Ottoman Turkish: قانون أساسي, romanized:
Kānûn-ı Esâsî, lit. 'Basic law'; French:
Constitution ottomane ; persian: قانون...
- Tha
Khanun (Thai: ท่าขนุน) is a town and
subdistrict (tambon) of
Thong Pha Phum
district of the
Kanchanaburi Province, Thailand. It is
named after the...