- The Banu
Qasi, Banu Kasi, Beni Casi (Arabic: بني قسي or بنو قسي,
meaning "sons" or "heirs of C****ius"), Banu Musa, or al-Qasawi were a Muladí (local convert)...
- met Ibn al-
Qaṣīʾs son in
Tunis 1194. Ibn ʿArabī
would later write a
commentary (sharḥ) on the text
pejoratively referring to Ibn al-
Qaṣī as a
blind follower...
- K****is (Arabic: نبيل قسيس), also
transliterated as
Nabil K****is,
Nabil Qasis,
Nabeel Q****is, etc., is a
Palestinian academic and
politician from Ramallah...
-
Valiyankode Umer Qazi ( Arabic:عمر القاضي بلنكوتي, Malayalam: വെളിയങ്കോട്ട് ഉമര് ഖാസി(റ) ) was a
Muslim scholar,
freedom fighter and poet. He was active...
- he
gives up his
position or is deposed. The term
qäsis (Ge'ez: ቀሲስ, Amharic: ቄስ qes; Tigrinya: ቀሺ
qäši),
which refers to
married priest in the Ethiopian...
-
genealogist Ibn Hazm
named as Abu Tawr ibn
Qasi, son of the
eponymous ancestor of the
powerful Muwallad Banu
Qasis. At the
imperial diet of Paderborn, he...
- Dayr al-Q****i or Deir el-
Qasi (Arabic: دير القاسي), was a
Palestinian Arab
village located 26 km
northeast of the city of Acre,
which was depo****ted during...
- garrison.: 205–206 In 798, however,
Pamplona is
recorded as
being under a Banu
Qasi governor,
Mutarrif ibn Musa. Ibn Musa lost
control of
Pamplona to a po****r...
- headquarters. A
contingent led by Musa ibn Musa al-
Qasi, the
leader of the semi-independent Banu
Qasi prin****lity to the north,
joined this army despite...
- (Arabic: الكبير); died 26
September 862) was
leader of the
Muwallad Banu
Qasi clan and
ruler of a semi-autonomous prin****lity in the
upper Ebro valley...