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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BaghdadBaghdad - Wikipedia

    18 hours ago · Baghdad is also home to the grave of Abu Hanifa where there is a cell and a mosque above it. The Sultan of Baghdad, Abu Said Bahadur Khan, was a Tatar king who embraced Islam. In its early years, the city was known as a deliberate reminder of an expression in the Qur'an, when it refers to Paradise. It took four years to build (764–768).

    • History of Baghdad

      The city of Baghdad (Arabic: بغداد Baġdād) was established...

    • Mayor

      Person Time as mayor Rashid al-Khuja: 1924-1925 Mahmud Subhi...

    • Mustansiriya Madrasah

      Al-Mustansiriya Madrasa (Arabic: المدرسة المستنصرية) was a...

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  3. 18 hours ago · The Great Mosque of Samarra in Iraq was completed in 847. It combined the hypostyle architecture of rows of columns supporting a flat base, above which a huge spiralling minaret was constructed. The beginning of construction of the Great Mosque at Cordoba in 785 marked the beginning of Islamic architecture in Spain and Northern Africa. The ...

  4. 18 hours ago · While mosque architecture largely followed the Almohad model, one noted change was the progressive increase in the size of the sahn or courtyard, which was previously a minor element of the floor plan but which eventually, in the subsequent Saadian period, became as large as the main prayer hall and sometimes larger.

    • Sultanate
    • Arabic
  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PortugalPortugal - Wikipedia

    18 hours ago · After defeating the Visigoths in a few months, the Umayyad Caliphate started expanding rapidly in the peninsula. Beginning in 726, the land that is now Portugal became part of the vast Umayyad Caliphate's empire of Damascus, until its collapse in 750.

  6. 18 hours ago · Caesarea (/ ˌ s ɛ z ə ˈ r iː ə, ˌ s ɛ s-, ˌ s iː z-/ SE(E)Z-ə-REE-ə, SESS-; Koinē Greek: Καισάρεια, romanized: Kaisáreia; Hebrew: קֵיסָרְיָה, romanized: Qēsaryah; Arabic: قيسارية, romanized: Qaysāriyyah), also Caesarea Maritima, Caesarea Palaestinae or Caesarea Stratonis, was an ancient and medieval port city on the coast of the Eastern Mediterranean ...

    • 4th century BCE
  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BeershebaBeersheba - Wikipedia

    18 hours ago · Great Mosque of Beersheba The Great Mosque of Beersheba in 1948. In 1906, during the Ottoman era, the Great Mosque of Beersheba was built with donations collected from the Bedouin residents in the Negev. It was used actively as a mosque until the city fell to Israeli forces in 1948. The mosque was used until 1953 as the city's courthouse.

  8. 18 hours ago · This process, in which dharma was presented as an equivalent of, but also a response to, the western notion of "religion", reflects a fundamental change in the Hindu sense of identity and in the attitude toward other religious and cultural traditions. The foreign tools of "religion" and "nation" became tools of self-definition, and a new and ...

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