- of Dahomey. The name
Whydah is an
anglicised form of
Xwéda (pronounced Xʷi-dah), from the
Xweda Gbe
language and
people of Benin. Today, the Beninese...
- Pherá, also
spelled Xwela, is a Gbe
language of Benin. It
forms a
dialect chain with
Western Phla. Pherá at
Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022) v t e...
- Range; the Fon in the area
around Abomey in the
South Central; and the Mina,
Xweda, and Aja (who came from what is now Togo in the 12th century) on the coast...
- century, Dahomey's king
Agaja conquered the
Xwedá kingdom (in what is now
southern Benin) and the
Xwedá's serpent vodún came to be
widely adopted by the...
- fra-vaz cæwyn God Homa/Huma/Oma Yezdan, Xwedê, Xuda, Xodê, Xwa(y) Xwedê,
Xweda, Xudê Xwədāi Xədâ Xıdo Xoda, Hwdâ Xuda Xedâ Xuda xodā
Xuthoi Xodā, Izad...
- Îslamê (Basics of Islam) Nûbihara Biçûkan (The
Spring of Children) Erdê
Xweda (Astronomy and
Geography book) Dîwana
Helbestan Shakely, F. (2002). "Aḥmad-e...
-
tarsidan fire âtaş âdır âgir âtaš otash, olov God Xuda Homa, Huma, Oma, Heq
Xweda, Xudê, Xwedê, Yazdân Xodâ Xudo, Yazdon, Ezid good xub, xas hewl, rınd, weş...
-
immigrant groups and the
indigenes from Tádó: they are Gɛ̀n, Sáhwè and
Xweɖá.'[6] The
latter two
dialects are part of Capo's Phla–Pherá branch, and Capo...
- Dahomey,
ruled by King
Trudo Agaja,
conquers and
annexes the
Kingdom of
Xwéda,
after King
Haffon is
killed in
battle (three
years earlier,
Agaja conquered...
- Dahomey,
ruled by King
Trudo Agaja,
conquers and
annexes the
Kingdom of
Xwéda,
after King
Haffon is
killed in
battle (three
years earlier,
Agaja conquered...