- The
Midrarid dynasty (Arabic: بنو مدرار, romanized: Banu
Midrār) was a
Berber dynasty that
ruled the
Sijilmasa region in
Morocco from
their capital of...
- The
history of
North Africa has been
divided into its prehistory, its
classical period, the
arrival and
spread of Islam, the
colonial period, and finally...
-
leader of the town. This Abu al-Qasim and his
descendants are
known as the
Midrar dynasty.[citation needed] The Arab
geographer Ibn
Hawqal visited Spain and...
-
Norwegians are
present in the
standard reader Sýnisbók íslenzkra bókmennta til
miðrar átjándu aldar,
compiled by Sigurður
Nordal on the
grounds that the language...
- and Algeria. The
Berber prin****lity Banu
Midrar is
named after Abul-Qasim
Samku ibn Wasul,
nicknamed Midrar, a
Miknasa Berber who was said to take part...
-
Muslim State in
Morocco after Nekor (710–1019),
Barghawata (744–1058), and
Midrar (757–976).
Idris I
conquered large parts of
northern Morocco and founded...
-
Morocco remained under the rule of
Berber kingdoms such as
Barghawata and
Midrar... etc. In 789 AD, with the
approval of the locals, a
former Umayyad courtier...
- 1943-44),
digitised at Heimskringla.no Sýnisbók íslenzkra bókmennta til
miðrar átjándu aldar, ed. by Sigurður Nordal, Guðrún P. Helgadóttir, and Jón Jóhannesson...
- Manual.
Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9780748621378. Pellat, Ch. (1991). "
Midrār". In Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E. & Pellat, Ch. (eds.). The Encyclopaedia...
- lestrarbók 1750-1930 (1st ed. 1924) and Sýnisbók íslenzkra bókmennta til
miðrar átjándu
aldar (1953), the
latter one in
collaboration with Guðrún P. Helgadóttir...