Ahrar (other)
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Ahrar (other)
Ahrar or al ahrar (Arabic, 'free ones' or 'liberals'), singular al hurr, or variants, may refer to: Organisations and political parties *Ahrar Party (Azerbaijan), 1918–1920 *Liberal Socialists Party ''(Hizb al-Ahrar)'', Egypt, founded 1976 *Ahrar Party (India), or Majlis-e-Ahrar-e-Islam, founded in Punjab 1929 **Majlis-e-Ahrar-e-Islam *National Liberal Party (Lebanon), or Al-Wataniyyuun al Ahrar, founded 1958 * Al-Ahrar Bloc, Iraq, founded in 2014 * Ahrar ul Hind, Pakistan, founded in 2014 *Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, a Pakistani terrorist organization, founded 2014 Syrian Civil War groups * Ahrar al-Jazeera brigade * Ahrar al-Sham * Jaysh al-Ahrar * Ahrar al-Sharkas *Ahrar al-Sharqiya * Liwa Ahrar Souriya Media * ''Al Ahrar'' (weekly), Egyptian newspaper (1977–2013) *Libya Al Ahrar TV, Libyan TV channel People * Al-Hurr ibn Yazid al Tamimi, a general of the Umayyad army * Al-Hurr al-Amili (1624–1693), a Twelver Shi’a scholar *Al-Hurr ibn Abd al-Rahman al-Thaqafi, an early Umayyad ...
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Ahrar Party (Azerbaijan)
The Ahrar Party ( az, Əhrar firqəsi; "Liberal Party") was a small political party in the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (1918–1920), representing mainly the Sunni peasantry of Azerbaijan. It had five members in the Azerbaijani Parliament of 1918, and one minister in the fourth cabinet. It was dissolved after Soviet invasion of Azerbaijan in 1920.Nəsibzadə, Nəsib. Azərbaycan Democratic Respublikası. Bakı, 1990 Members of Parliament * Aslan bey Gardashov * Haji Molla Ahmad Nuruzadeh * Mukhtar Afandizadeh * Garib Karimoglu * Bayram Niyazi Kichikkhanly Minister * Aslan bey Gardashov, Minister of Agriculture See also * Azerbaijan Democratic Republic * Musavat * Ittihad The Ittihad Party ( az, İttihad firqəsi) was a radical Islamist party in the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic in 1917–1920. It was formed in September 1917 in opposition to the secular Musavat Party and proposed political unity of all the Musl ... References Defunct political parties in Azerbaijan Pre ...
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Libya Al Ahrar TV
Libya Al Ahrar ( ar, ليبيا الأحرار) is a Libyan TV channel broadcast by satellite from its headquarters in Doha. The channel was created in 2011 during the Libyan Civil War. It presents news, opinions, analysis, photo and video reports about Libya in specific and the region in a wider scope. It focuses on Libya’s revolution and future toward building a democratic state. Structure Libya TV was founded by Libyans led by Mahmmud Shammam and Mohamad A. Al Akari. With the full support by the Libyan PM, Dr. Mahmmud Jebrel, who helped to bring the full support from the Qatari government. Mohamad A. Al Akari was the first General Manager, Serage Beshti was the Head of Administration, and Huda Al Srari was Head of PR. Currently it has around 50 employees working to provide exposure to Libyans different opinions. Huda Alsrari were named to be head of Doha operation later 2013 and held this position till mid of 2014 before she had to resign with Mahmoud Shamam. The headquarte ...
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Hur (Bible)
Hur (also spelled Chur) ( he, חור) was a companion of Moses and Aaron in the Hebrew Bible. He was a member of the Tribe of Judah. His identity remains unclear in the Torah itself, but it is elaborated in rabbinical commentary. Other individuals named Hur are also mentioned in the Bible. Hur, companion of Moses In the Book of Exodus, Hur is first mentioned as a companion of Moses and Aaron watching the Battle of Rephidim against the Amalekites. He aided Aaron to hold up the hands of Moses when Moses realised that the Israelites prevailed in battle while his hands were raised: "Aaron and Hur stayed up his hands, the one on the one side, and the other on the other side". He is mentioned once more as Moses' staunch ally when he is left in co-charge with Aaron of the Israelites when Moses was away on Mount Sinai. Moses told the people "Aaron and Hur are with you; whosoever hath a cause, let him come near unto them." However, only Aaron is mentioned in the later account of events ...
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Hurriya (other)
Hurriya or Hurriyya (Arabic, 'freedom') may refer to: Places *Al-Hurriya, neighborhood in Baghdad, Iraq *Hurriya, a district of Idlib, Syria * Al Hurriya Air Base, a military airbase in Iraq *Camp Hurriya, or Camp Liberty, a former U.S. military installation in Baghdad, Iraq * Huriyah al Jadidah, a village in Iraq Sports *Hurriyya SC, a Maldivian sports club and football team * El Horreya SC, an Egyptian football club *Al-Hurriya SC, a Syrian sports club Other uses * ''Al-Hurriya'' (DFLP), a Palestinian political newspaper * Al-Hurriya (magazine), published in Baghdad in 1924 and 1925 See also * * *Ahrar (other) (for al hurr) *Hur (other) *Hurra (other) *Freedom and Justice Party (Egypt) ) , newspaper = ''Freedom and Justice'' , headquarters = 20 King El-Salem Hameed Street Roda Island, Cairo , foundation = , banned = (continues to function underground) , ideology = Islamism Social conservatismReligious conservatismMixed e ...
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Hurra (other)
Hurra may refer to: * "Hurra" (song), a song by the punk band Die Ärzte * Alhurra (or al-Hurra), an American Arabic-language TV channel *Al-hurra, an Arabic title for women with a position of power or high status * Libya Alhurra TV, an internet TV channel * Al-Hurra, Syria, a village See also * * *Ahrar (other) *Hur (other) *Hura (other) * Hurrah (other) *Hurriya (other) Hurriya or Hurriyya (Arabic, 'freedom') may refer to: Places *Al-Hurriya, neighborhood in Baghdad, Iraq *Hurriya, a district of Idlib, Syria * Al Hurriya Air Base, a military airbase in Iraq *Camp Hurriya, or Camp Liberty, a former U.S. military i ...
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Hur (other)
Hur or HUR may refer to: People * Hur (Korean name), also spelled Heo * Hur (Bible), a number of biblical figures * Hur-ul-Nisa Begum, first of the fourteen children of Mumtaz Mahal Places * Hur, Iran (other), a number of places * Hur, West Virginia, U.S. Other uses * Ḥūr or Houri, beings in Islamic mythology * Hurs, a Muslim Sufi community in Sindh, Pakistan * Greater Copenhagen Authority (HUR), a former Danish regional development organisation * Halkomelem language, ISO 639-3 language code hur * Handball Union of Russia (HUR) * ELAV-like protein 1, or HuR, a human gene *HUR MOA, the Chief Directorate of Intelligence of the Ministry of Defence of Ukraine See also * * *Ahrar (other) (for al hurr) *Ben-Hur (other) *Her (other) *Hura (other) *Hurra (other) *Hurriya (other) Hurriya or Hurriyya (Arabic, 'freedom') may refer to: Places *Al-Hurriya, neighborhood in Baghdad, Iraq *Hurriya, a district of Idlib, Syria ...
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Hurr (book)
Horr ( fa, حر) was a book by the Iranian author Ali Shariati about the historic Battle of Karbala in which Hussein, the grandson of the Muslim prophet Muhammad, was killed by Yazid. Horr was a commander of the army of Yazid during the battle. First involved in fighting Hussein, Horr defected from the army of Yazid, joined Hussein, and was killed by Yazid's forces. The book examines fate, choice, and predestination as portrayed by Horr's decision to switch sides during the fateful battle. See also * Ahrar (other) Ahrar or al ahrar (Arabic, 'free ones' or 'liberals'), singular al hurr, or variants, may refer to: Organisations and political parties *Ahrar Party (Azerbaijan), 1918–1920 *Liberal Socialists Party ''(Hizb al-Ahrar)'', Egypt, founded 1976 *Ahr ... References External links Summary of the book
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Al-Hurr SC
Al-Hurr Sport Club ( ar, نادي الحُرّ الرياضي), is an Iraqi football team based in Karbalaa, that plays in Iraq Division Two. Managerial history * Maitham Dael-Haq * Ahmed Awad See also * 2012–13 Iraq FA Cup * 2016–17 Iraq FA Cup The 2016–17 Iraq FA Cup was the 28th edition of the Iraqi knockout football cup as a clubs-only competition, the main domestic cup in Iraqi football. A total of 19 teams from the Iraqi Premier League and 41 teams from the Iraq Division One part ... References External links Al-Hurr SCon Goalzz.com {{Iraq Division Two 2003 establishments in Iraq Association football clubs established in 2003 Football clubs in Karbala Karbala ...
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Lambda Aurigae
Lambda Aurigae, Latinized from λ Aurigae, is the Bayer designation for a solar analog star in the northern constellation of Auriga. It is visible to the naked eye with an apparent visual magnitude of 4.71. Based upon parallax measurements, it is approximately distant from the Earth. The star is drifting further away with a high radial velocity of +66.5 km/s, having come to within some 117,300 years ago. It has a high proper motion, traversing the celestial sphere at the rate of per year. Properties This is a G-type main sequence star with a stellar classification of G1 V. It is sometimes listed with a class of G1.5 IV-V Fe-1, which indicates the spectrum is showing some features of a more evolved subgiant star along with a noticeable underabundance of iron. In terms of composition it is similar to the Sun, while the mass and radius are slightly larger. It is 73% more luminous than the Sun and radiates this energy from its outer atmosphere at ...
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Banu Al-Ahrar
''Al-Abnāʾ'' () was a term that was used in pre-Islamic and early Islamic Yemen to refer to the descendants of Iranian soldiers who had intermarried with local Arab women in southern Arabia after its conquest by the Sasanian Iranian Empire. Sasanian Iranian troops were garrisoned in Sanaʽa and its surrounding regions following the Sasanian Iranian reconquest of Yemen from the Aksumite Ethiopian Empire in the 570s CE. Their leaders largely converted to Islam following the rise of Muhammad and were active in the early Muslim conflicts. Etymology According to a commentary on a poem ''Kitab al-Aghani'' by the 10th-century Arab historian Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahani, these people were up until this time referred to as ''banū al-aḥrār'' (, ) in Sanaʽa and as ''al-abnāʾ'' (, ) in the rest of Yemen. The names were defined as such due to a narration that told of a strong storm that hit ancient Yemen and revealed a stone inscription that stated, "Who rules Dhamar? Himyar the G ...
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Al-Ahrar Subdistrict
Al-Ahrar ( ar, ناحية الأحرار) is a subdistrict of the An Numaniyah district in the Wasit Governorate of Iraq, on the west bank of the Tigris. Its seat is the town of the Ahrar. The subdistrict was established in 1961, and covers 1244 square km. Farming is the main occupation in Al-Ahrar subdistrict due to irrigated alluvial soil. It is famous for production of wheat, rice and date palm. Ahdab oil field Ahdab oil field lies in a 303 square km in Al-Ahrar subdistrict. Iraqi's official sources estimated the oilfield's reserves 1 billion barrel. A contract to develop Ahdab oil field was signed between Saddam Hussein's regime and CNPC in 1996, but the deal delayed after UN imposed sanctions and postponed further by the Iraq War. The work commenced in 2008 and the production begun 2011 with 60,000 barrels per day, increasing to 140,000 barrel the next year. Ahdab oilfield is a joint project between CNPC (75%) and South Oil Company (25%). Ubaydah Bin Al Jarrah Air Base Ubay ...
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Al-Hurr Ibn Abd Al-Rahman Al-Thaqafi
Al-Ḥurr ibn ʿAbd al-Raḥmān al-Thaqafi ( ar, الحر بن عبد الرحمن الثقفي) was an early Umayyad governor who ruled the Islam, Muslim province of Al-Andalus from between 716 and 718. He was the third successor to Musa bin Nusair, the Ifriqiya, North African governor who had directed the conquest of Visigothic Spain, Visigothic Hispania several years earlier in 711.Hitti (1956) p. 499 Al-Hurr was the first Muslim commander to cross the Pyrenees in 717, leading a small raiding party into Septimania. His incursions were largely unsuccessful, for which he was deposed in 718.Livermore (1947) p. 30 Background In 711, an Umayyad army led by freedman Tariq bin Ziyad had been sent to the Iberian peninsula under the orders of North African governor Musa bin Nusair, resulting in its eventual Umayyad conquest of Hispania, conquest. Leaving his son 'Abd al-'Aziz in charge, Musa led a triumphant procession of over 400 well-dressed Visigothic princes, followed by slaves and ...
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