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Examples
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So a new Gospel was framed, called the Tarikh-i-Jadid (` ` The new History '' or ` ` The new Way ''), embodying and including a lot of legendary matter, and issued with the authority of ` ` the Church. ''
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So a new Gospel was framed, called the Tarikh-i-Jadid ( "The new History" or "The new
Pagan and Christian creeds: their origin and meaning Edward Carpenter 1886
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The text was printed in Al-Jabarti's Tarikh `Aja'ib Al-Athar: On behalf of the French based sic on the foundations of freedom and concord...the people of Egypt know that for a long time, the Sanajiq who tyrannically rule in Egyptian lands treated with contempt and humiliation the French people, and they mistreated its merchants with abuse and harm, so the hour of their punishment has come...
Friday, September 30, 2005 As'ad 2005
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Timothy Insoll, one of the few archaeologists who have excavated in the city, says the Tarikh el-Sudan, a sixteenth history of the West African region ( "tarikh" is "history" in Arabic), was helpful in studying an area in which there was a collection of mosques and scholars 'residences now referred to as the University of Timbuktu.
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One of the books in Hadaira's library is the Tarikh al-Fattash, a history of the Sudan up to the late sixteenth century, by another of Haidara's ancestors, Mahmud al-Kati, an ophthalmologist, lawyer, and astronomer.
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The most important, however, at least from one angle, was a translation of the _Tarikh es Sudan_, or _The History of the
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One was the Tarikh al-Fattiish, the chronicle of the seeker after knowledge, written by Mahmud Kati in the early fifteenth century.
The Black Experience in America Norman Coombs
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[23] For literature, see Edward G. Browne's Traveller's Narrative on the Episode of the Bâb (1891), and his New History of the Bâb translated from the Persian of the Tarikh-i-Jadid (Cambridge, 1893).
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[6] The same words are repeated in the Infak el Maysur fl Tarikh bilad el
First Footsteps in East Africa Richard Francis Burton 1855
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(Tarikh.p. 116,) and D'Herbelot (Bibliotheque Orientale, p. 703.) ---- The author of the Zenut-ul-Tarikh states, that the lady herself affirmed her belief of this from the extraordinary liveliness of the infant, and its lying on the right side.
History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire — Volume 2 Edward Gibbon 1765
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