- and Tuva.
Alternative English spellings include sanjac, sanjack, sandjak,
sanjaq, sinjaq, sangiaq, and zanzack,
although these are now all
obsolete or archaic...
- Koy
Sanjaq Christian Neo-Aramaic (native name: ܣܘܪܬ, romanized: Sûrat) is a
variety of
Northeastern Neo-Aramaic
spoken by
Christian ****yrians in Koy Sanjaq...
- Turkish) and "
sanjaq" ("flag" in Turkish), and thus Koy
Sanjaq translates to "village of the flag".
According to
local tradition, Koy
Sanjaq was founded...
- Aleppo, the
Vilayet of Bairut, the
Vilayet of Syria, the
Sanjaq of the Lebanon, and the
Sanjaq of Jerusalem. It
included that part of the
country which...
-
Sanjaq (Persian: سنجاق, also
Romanized as
Sanjāq) is a
village in Akhtachi-ye
Gharbi Rural District, in the
Central District of
Mahabad County, West Azerbaijan...
- Koy
Sanjaq Jewish Neo-Aramaic is a
dialect of
Northeastern Neo-Aramaic in the Inter-Zab
Jewish Neo-Aramaic cluster. All
speakers migrated to
Israel in...
- Sanjak-bey,
sanjaq-bey or -beg (Ottoman Turkish: سنجاق بك, lit. 'lord of the standard') was the
title given in the
Ottoman Empire to a bey (a high-ranking...
- Turkish: سنجاق قدس, romanized: Sancâk-ı Kudüs; Arabic: سنجق القدس, romanized:
Sanjaq al-Quds) was an
Ottoman sanjak that
formed part of the
Damascus Eyalet for...
-
missiles at the
headquarters of two
Iranian Kurdish opposition parties in Koy
Sanjaq,
located in Iraq's semi-autonomous
Kurdish region.
Initial reports from...
-
formally identified Palestine as
including the
sanjaqs of Akka (the Galilee), the
Sanjaq of Nablus, and the
Sanjaq of
Jerusalem (Kudus Sherif) The New Testament...