「DAMASCUS」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

DAMASCUS

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  • Crusader armies attacked Damascus a third time in 1148 during the Second Crusad
  • e finished the construction of the Citadel of Damascus, a project that had begun under the direction
  • still is (compared to other neighborhoods in Damascus), a very conservative neighborhood.
  • uilder in Brazil, a taxi driver in Beirut and Damascus, a cemetery attendant and an aide to King Zog
  • id that he wanted to hear more specifics from Damascus about any withdrawal: "It's a nice gesture bu
  • north and northwest of the old walled city of Damascus about 2.4 kilometres (1.5 mi) from the Citade
  • Damascus Academy is/was a Quaker school in Damascus, O
  • lished The Matzah of Zion, a treatment of the Damascus affair of 1840 that repeats the ancient "bloo
  • the infamous Blood Libel associated with the Damascus Affair.
  • r and started teaching in high schools within Damascus after her return from the UK, then worked in
  • Paul settled in Damascus after having claimed (Acts 9:1-9) to have wit
  • r, when al-Adil's other son al-Ashraf annexed Damascus after al-Mu'azzam died, al-Dakhwar was promot
  • In 1129, the Franks attacked Damascus again, but their siege of the city was unsucc
  • In 1130 he allied with Taj al-Mulk Buri of Damascus against the crusaders, but this was only a ru
  • as well as their joint triumphant march into Damascus against the Turks.
  • In 1994 al-Aziz besieged Damascus; Al-Afdal asked help to Saladin's brother, Al
  • When al-Adil died, his son and successor in Damascus, al-Mu'azzam, made him chief superintendent o
  • estow on Muhammad Ali the pashaliks of Syria, Damascus, Aleppo and Itcheli, together with the distri
  • ngs are on display in the National museums of Damascus, Aleppo and Deir Atieh and the presidential p
  • s already active in four major Syrian cities: Damascus, Aleppo, Latakia and Tartous and is currently
  • al-Azm influence in the Levant as they ruled Damascus, Aleppo, Hama, Tripoli, Sidon, and for a shor
  • s so notable that official grievances sent to Damascus all but ceased.
  • Eventually a break in the clouds over Damascus allowed the Phantoms to see the ground, re-or
  • It lies to the southwest of central Damascus, along the Mezzeh highway.
  • Ismat was born in Damascus and read English at Damascus University.
  • He was stationed in Damascus and played a pivotal role in the events leadi
  • Yazid's corps came to Damascus and captured Beirut.
  • he was imprisoned by the Ottoman governor of Damascus and was put in jail.
  • turned east across the Jezreel Valley towards Damascus and then to Mesopotamia.
  • he Jacobites - Theodore and Sabukht - came to Damascus and held an inquiry into the Faith with the M
  • ts feeder elementary schools are Clearspring, Damascus and Woodfield.
  • II who financed the repairs after he visited Damascus and found the tomb in a state of disrepair.
  • e no major engagements between the crusaders, Damascus, and Zengi for the next few years, but Zengi
  • who had succeeded his father Buri as emir of Damascus, and who was in fear for his life from his ow
  • nternational relations from the University of Damascus, and was awarded the "Decoration for Services
  • was modelled after the old Umayyad palace in Damascus and served as a symbolic tie between the new
  • Persian Gulf, disguised as a Mamluk, visiting Damascus, and entering the great mosque undetected.
  • ently working in similar positions in Tabgha, Damascus and finally Haifa where he died.
  • oman gravity dam in the Syrian desert between Damascus and Palmyra, dating to the 2nd century AD.
  • , ‘Abd al-Aziz ibn Musa's head was brought to Damascus and displayed publicly to an audience where t
  • been described as one of the finest khans of Damascus, and the most "ambitious" work of architectur
  • t year engaged in speaking tours in Istanbul, Damascus and Beirut as well as Japan.
  • to the communities of Jerusalem, Aleppo, and Damascus, and he obtained books from those cities.
  • in the early 8th century, Cairo in 800 and in Damascus and Aleppo in 1270.
  • After completing his studies he returned to Damascus and joined the faculty of the College of Fine
  • uncle as-Salih Ismail soon expelled him from Damascus, and he fled to the Jazirah, where he allied
  • inal and important hub mostly connecting with Damascus and destinations in the gulf region.
  • Later he went to Damascus and visited the court of the caliph Abd al-Ma
  • ubid oligarchy, the period of rivalry between Damascus and Cairo to become capital of the Ayyubid em
  • In 1137 Tripoli was invaded by the sultan of Damascus, and Pons was taken prisoner and later execut
  • Tens of thousands reportedly marched in Damascus and its suburbs, and about 7,000 protesters w
  • Bligger's poems mention Damascus and Saladin and Bligger's homesickness, which
  • luding the historical cities of Mecca, Cairo, Damascus and Aleppo.
  • Out of Tlemcen, Fes, Tunis, Mecca, Jerusalem, Damascus and many other cities which he visited, he ch
  • -of-way is owned by the Towns of Abingdon and Damascus, and by the National Park Service and the Nat
  • ticularly in South Lebanon and in the area of Damascus and gained the conversion of some Syrian Orth
  • Rif Dimashq Governorate, to the northeast of Damascus and Lake Khatuniyah (Khatunia), Al-Hasakah Go
  • epeated in the other great Umayyad mosques in Damascus and Aleppo.
  • o, and academies of Arabic Language in Cairo, Damascus and Baghdad.
  • Ghutah occupied the plain surrounding Damascus and was known as the "Garden Land", due to th
  • antrymen was defeated by Toghtekin, atabeg of Damascus, and Gervaise was taken prisoner, like his pr
  • known about his life except that he was from Damascus and his sobriquet was Al-Mu-tamen Al-Shamy (t
  • s 16:7-9) As a result, Tiglath-Pileser sacked Damascus and annexed Aram.
  • erarchy, as subsequently Ahatallah, Bishop of Damascus and a convert to Catholicism, claimed to be h
  • Suphi was educated in Jerusalem, Damascus and Erzurum before attending Galatasaray High
  • rom fatigue and thirst on the forced march to Damascus, and later from cold and starvation in Yazid'
  • two kings as Ahaz' two enemies Rezin, king of Damascus and Pekah, son of Remaliah, king of Samaria.
  • John made peace with Damascus and used the forces of Jerusalem to attack As
  • om west to east, flowing from Hermon south of Damascus, and like its companion Abana River travels a
  • The region of Upu is centered at Damascus, and the Amqu is the Beqaa Valley region to t
  • rom 1342, Roman Catholic clergy were based in Damascus and other areas, and worked to heal the polit
  • However, Baibars al-Jashnakir was in Damascus and sent a message to the Sultan of Egypt to
  • ordained a priest in 1817 for the Diocese of Damascus and served as director of the Patriarchal Sch
  • the Faculty of Fine Arts of the University of Damascus and professor of Oil painting.
  • ic link in the Middle East - the line between Damascus and Medina, and the opening of the Damascus t
  • In 1245 as-Salih captured Damascus, and was awarded the title of sultan by the c
  • ighborhood is considered the Southern Gate of Damascus, and was created as a trading center by the p
  • Educated at the University of Damascus and St. Antony's College, University of Oxfor
  • which was closer to the Byzantine border than Damascus, and resumed hostilities against the Byzantin
  • a junior officer to Tutush I, Seljuk ruler of Damascus and Syria.
  • He was named governor of Damascus and used this base to expand his power, and c
  • ntres devoted to Hanbali school of thought in Damascus, and thereafter pursued his quest for knowled
  • elected as new Patriarch by the Christians of Damascus and consecrated on May 1, 1634, taking the na
  • in Kandilli, Bilecik, Turkey, also served in Damascus and Beirut.
  • Great Seneca Creek begins in Damascus and flows south past Montgomery Village, Germ
  • he, as a general of division, was Governor of Damascus, and at the beginning of the Crimean war, did
  • educated at the Lazarist missionary school in Damascus and later at the military academy in Istanbul
  • The US says that militants fly into Damascus and then, with the help of emplaced networks,
  • i was an Arab mathematician who was active in Damascus and Baghdad.
  • He was a nephew of John of Damascus and spent a half-century in the monastery of
  • ointed his brother Al-Muwaffaq as governor of Damascus, and his son, later the Caliph Al-Mu'tadid, t
  • hihab ad-Din appointed Mu'in ad-Din atabeg of Damascus and gave him the title Isfahsaller.
  • t his efforts short, as French forces entered Damascus and the country was divided into five states,
  • He subsequently became governor of Damascus and, in 1589, after the great revolt of the J
  • ly Church, i.e. at such centres as Jerusalem, Damascus, Antioch and Alexandria, grew from materials
  • ding Crete, Peloponnese, Rhodes, Cairo, Acre, Damascus, Antioch and Cyprus and was felt as far away
  • me of the Treasury from the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus appears in the opening fly-by titles of the g
  • She was a professor at the University of Damascus, appointed Associate Minister of Health in 19
  • e unincorporated communities of McConnell and Damascus are located in the township, and once New Pen
  • gh connected to those at the Great Mosques of Damascus, are also a hybrid of Christian and Arabic in
  • nteers and Palestinian refugees living in the Damascus area.
  • r 1980, at another Titan II silo (374-7) near Damascus, Arkansas, a technician dropped a wrench that
  • Tornado damage near Damascus, Arkansas.
  • d Ilghazi came to assist him, Radwan besieged Damascus as well.
  • nwhile gained control over Egypt, and claimed Damascus as his successor; he legitimized this claim b
  • Austrian expeditionary force headquarters in Damascus, assisting Arthur Ruppin in sending financial
  • native of al-Yamamah, but also spent time in Damascus at the court of the Umayyad caliphs.
  • 962, the former Syrian prime minister died in Damascus, at the age of 85, ending a career that spann
  • a," beginning his story when he "marched from Damascus at the head of ten thousand of the bravest Ar
  • Anyone who lived in Damascus at that time was witness to the Arab inclinat
  • He was born in Damascus at in the suburb of al-Qaymariyya in 1925.
  • Ben-Hadad II (Heb.), was the king of Aram Damascus at the time of the battle of Qarqar against t
  • oghtekin, founder of the Burid dynasty, ruled Damascus at that time.
  • the late Melkite Patriarch Maximos V Hakim in Damascus August 9, 1981.
  • here they were mainly located between Houran, Damascus, Baalbeck and Nablus.
  • Damascus Baptist Church Arbor is a historic church in
  • crooked), though if the reference to Damascus be limited to the city, as in the Arabic vers
  • There is also another tomb in Damascus believed to be his.
  • (who had received troops also by Toghtekin of Damascus) besieged the town of Azaz, to the north of A
  • walls of the old city south of the Citadel of Damascus between the late-Ottoman-era markets of al-Ha
  • I (Aramaic: Bar-Hadad I) was the king of Aram Damascus between 885 BCE and 865 BCE.
  • Saint Barsus of Damascus, bishop
  • Production of Damascus blades
  • way to defend the Jews falsely accused in the Damascus Blood Libel.
  • He has been posted in Damascus, Bonn, New York (Mission to the United Nation
  • He refused to comply and was imprisoned in Damascus, but escaped and fled to join Free French for
  • ur ad-Din recognized Mujir ad-Din as ruler of Damascus, but in 1151 Mujir ad-Din allied with the cru
  • tled, Bohemond joined Baldwin II in attacking Damascus but the crusaders were defeated at the Battle
  • Abid was born in Damascus, but he was educated in Beirut, Lebanon.
  • besiege Banias, Zengi once more laid siege to Damascus, but quickly abandoned it again.
  • o not merely mean Feisal and his followers at Damascus, but the so-called Arabs who inhabit the coun
  • In 1126, a Crusader army approached Damascus, but their advance was stopped 30 kilometres
  • t Cosmas (Greek: Κοσμάς) was probably born in Damascus, but he was orphaned at a young age.
  • he citadel in response to multiple attacks on Damascus by Crusader and Muslim armies.
  • nflict again, and Nur ad-Din finally occupied Damascus by force, exiling Mujir ad-Din to Homs.
  • t Christian, returned from a visit to Carmel, Damascus, Cairo, Jerusalem and Palestine with his deve
  • He was a weak ruler, however, and Damascus came under the influence of Nur ad-Din Zangi,
  • alian Imperial Force during the Gallipoli and Damascus campaigns of the First World War.
  • eath in 1095, his younger son Duqaq inherited Damascus, causing Duqaq's older brother Radwan to revo
  • his correspondence with the British consul in Damascus Charles Henry Churchill in 1841-42 is seen as
  • The Damascus Chronicle of the Crusades: Extracted and Tran
  • Damascus Community School is an unlicensed American sc
  • he Syrian government decided to shut down the Damascus Community School in light of the violation of
  • In accordance with the Damascus Community School's August 31, 2008 license an
  • r, DCS Board of Directors has voted to reopen Damascus Community School for 2010-2011 school year, g
  • lk and Western Railway funded construction to Damascus, completed in 1900.
  • ibn al-Zubayr rebelled against the Caliph of Damascus, conquered Mecca and stopped pilgrims from co
  • The University of Damascus consists of several faculties, Higher Institu
  • Rebuilt, Damascus continued to serve as a Mamluk provincial cap
  • This acquisition gave Damascus control of the trade route to southern Phoeni
  • He was appointed Director of the Damascus Countryside Industry Directorate in 1992.
  • In the 1940s, Husrieh wrote for the popular Damascus daily, al-Qabas (The Firebrand).
  • Maher, Rihanat al-nahda fi'l-fikr al-'arabi, Damascus, Dar al-Mada, 2000.
  • t al-nahda fi'l-fikr al-'arabi, Maher Charif, Damascus, Dar al-Mada, 2000.
  • as erected in 1574 by the Ottoman governor of Damascus Darwish Pasha.
  • Damascus Declaration (eng)
  • In 1244 the Sultan of Damascus demanded that the Templars help repel the Khw
  • ran was a Jewish banker and philanthropist of Damascus; died in 1874.
  • he Sultan, advised of this by the Governor of Damascus, discredited the report), in order to veil hi
  • The textual relationship between the Damascus Document and Community Rule is not completely
  • t symposia have examined such subjects as the Damascus Document, wisdom literature and the reworking
  • nal text that was later altered to become the Damascus Document, others that the Damascus Document w
  • d south and west, passing east of Palmyra and Damascus down to northeast Arabia.
  • ory, and ultimately forced them to retreat to Damascus due to a lack of supplies.
  • in, began as a servant to the Seljuk ruler of Damascus, Duqaq.
  • Moses Galante (died 1806) was chief rabbi of Damascus during the late 18th century and early 19th c
  • h Nur ad-Din, he marched south to help defend Damascus during the Second Crusade (see Siege of Damas
  • War I, he became chief of the royal court in Damascus during Amir Faisal's government where he used
  • fusing to move its troops from Lebanese soil, Damascus effectively torpedoed its implementation, sin
  • This siege of Damascus ended within a week when an army led by Nur a
  • one of the most modern and expensive areas of Damascus, especially the areas along the Mezzeh highwa
  • aries (hence expressions such as “the road to Damascus experience”), Saint Thomas himself who after
  • It was part of the 1549 created Damascus Eyalet.
  • r brother, Isam al-Attar is the leader of the Damascus Faction of the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood and
  • However, in 1244 an alliance of Jerusalem and Damascus failed to prevent the capture and sack of Jer
  • te Patriarchate, Germanos El Khazen bishop of Damascus, followed on March 7, 1807 by Aloisio Gandolf
  • imed King of Greater Syria on 7 March 1920 in Damascus, following the Arab revolt against the Ottoma
  • ugh General Amdar is able to win the Siege of Damascus for his ruler Khalid ibn al-Walid, he is made
  • on a routine re-supply flight, from Beirut to Damascus for Canadian peacekeepers in the Golan Height
  • major grocery store and relies on the town of Damascus for daily supplies.
  • when the Ahl al-Bayt was made to stop outside Damascus for four days.
  • tructed by the Greek architect Apollodorus of Damascus for the deployment of Roman troops in the war
  • unded in 2007 and started Capoeira classes in Damascus for Syrian youth.
  • qi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is visiting Damascus for the first time in more than a year.
  • Palestinian gaonate seems to have survived at Damascus, for Benjamin of Tudela (c.
  • nce Patriarch of Antioch and All the East, at Damascus, for the Cochin Diocese in Malankara.
  • fort against the Crusaders and the emirate of Damascus, forced Nur ad-Din to renounce to the expedit
  • Zengi's second attack was thwarted because Damascus forged a coalition with the Crusader states t
  • He was ruler of Damascus from 1875 to 1876.
  • s holding Quneitra, on the other main road to Damascus from the south, who reported the approach of
  • He worked with the Presbyterian Mission in Damascus from 1858 till 1865 and assisted Lord Dufferi
  • of "spiritual" and received an invitation to Damascus from Patriarch Moran Mor Ignatius Zakka I Iwa
  • te was breached, the next objectives were the Damascus gate and the Rockefeller museum.
  • mber 12, Irgun militants placed a bomb at the Damascus Gate that killed 20 passersby.
  • as Herods Gate, Lake Salome, Solomons Jewels, Damascus Gate, the Pool of Bathesda.
  • reet, beginning at the northern gate, today's Damascus Gate, and traversing the city in a straight l
  • The Syrian Emirs in Damascus gave Damascus to an-Nasir Yusuf the Ayyubid E
  • The Damascus Ghouta is a green agricultural belt surroundi
  • A Damascus goat named Qahr won the first prize for the "
  • The Damascus goat, also known as Aleppo, Halep, Baladi, Da
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