- and Qazwin; also
known as Casbeen, Casbin, Caspin, Ghazvin, Kasvin, and
Kazvin It was
completed by Musa ibn
Bugha al-Kabir.
Rainy days
calculated using...
- Palestine. A
Russian invasion of 1915 from
Caucasus established bases at Resht,
Kazvin and
Teheran and led to
inconclusive operations between the
Russians and...
-
people in all,
under the
command of a
Vladimir Shkvarev, were
dropped near
Kazvin. The NKVD
quickly arrested the
teams led by Shkvarev.
Further units were...
- Lim****ol 2002–2005
Lukoil Academic 2005–2006 Al-Ittihad
Jeddah 2006 Saba Mehr
Kazvin 2007 Al-Ittihad
Jeddah 2007 Al Nasr 2008 Al-Hilal 2008
Shandong Lions 2008–2009...
- of Horses, The Flow of Horses, and The Love of
Horses by
Jemalettin of
Kazvin The Blindman's Horses, a
critique on the
prior three volumes, by Kemalettin...
- and then
Tehran —
Ashgabat or
Tehran — Baku or, alternatively,
Basra —
Kazvin or
Dzhulfa — Beslan. The main port for
outbound supplies (via the Caspian...
- grandson, Shah Safi I (1629-1642),
relocated the
royal residence back to
Kazvin. In the
spring of 1634, news
reached the Shah's
court about Ottoman Sultan...
-
several months with them
traveling across Central Iran (Tabriz, Zanjan, and
Kazvin). He then went to Shiraz,
through Isfahan, and in June 1863 he
reached K****zm...
-
Central Office for
South Vietnam (abbreviated
COSVN /
ˈkɑːzvɪn/; Vietnamese: Văn phòng
Trung ương Cục miền Nam),
officially known as the
Central Executive...
- the British) (160
kilometres (100 mi) west of Hamadan) and
Qazvin (called
Kazvin by the British) (160
kilometres (100 mi) west of
Tehran and 320 kilometres...