- A
turbah (Arabic: تربة, lit. 'soil'), or mohr (Persian: مهر, lit. 'seal'), also
known as khāk-e shefā (Persian: خاکِ شِفا, lit. 'medicinal soil', also...
-
Turbah Karbala (Arabic: تربة کربلاء, lit. 'Soil of Karbala'), or Khāk-e Shifā (Lisan al-Dawat, Persian, and Urdu: خاکِ شِفاء, lit. 'Medicinal Soil'), or...
- At
Turbah (alternatively,
Turbat Dhubhan) is a town near the
coast of the Red Sea in Taiz Governorate, Yemen. It lies
about 75 km from Taiz and is about...
- Al-
Turbah (Arabic: التربة) is a sub-district
located in al-Sabrah District, Ibb Governorate, Yemen. Al-
Turbah had a po****tion of 4638
according to the...
- a
prayer mat and
touching the
ground (or a
raised piece of clay
called turbah by the Shia) with one's forehead. When done
firmly for
extended periods...
- The
Battle of
Turubah was
fought on May 26, 1924,
between the
forces of
Hussein bin Ali,
under the
command of his son
Abdullah bin Al-Hussein, and forces...
-
kingdom at 1,323,624.
After the city of Ta'if at
third place, Rabigh, Shafa,
Turbah and
Jumum are
other populous cities and
towns in the region. The region...
- The
Expedition of Umar ibn al-Khattab to
Turbah took
place in July 628 CE, or in the 3rd
month of the year 7 of the
Islamic calendar (AH). The expedition...
-
Djiboutian and
Yemeni sides of the Bab-el-Mandeb: Khôr ʽAngar
Moulhoule ****al At
Turbah Cheikh Saïd
Perim Strait: Red Sea Dam Region: Horn of
Africa Mashriq Rail...
- else: in practice, this
makes witr obligatory.
While in sujud, the use of a
turbah (a
small piece of soil or clay,
often a clay tablet), on
which a person...