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Bedia Ener
Bedia may refer to: Given name * Bedia Muvahhit (1897-1994), Turkish stage and movie actress * José Bedia Valdés (born 1959), Cuban painter Places * Bedia, Spain, a city in the province of Biscay, Spain * Bedia (village), a village in the Gali Municipality of Georgia Other uses * Bedia (caste) The Bedia are a community in India. They believe that they originally lived on Mohdipahar of Hazaribagh district and have descended from the union of Vedbansi prince with a Munda girl. The other view is that a section of the Kudmis were outca ..., a community of Bihar, northern India * Bedia (Muslim caste), a community of Bihar, northern India * Bedia (Pashtun tribe), a community of Bihar, northern India * Bedia Cathedral, a medieval Georgian Orthodox cathedral {{disambig ...
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Bedia Muvahhit
Bedia Muvahhit (born Emine Bedia Şekip; 1896 – 20 January 1994) was a Turkish stage and movie actress. She is remembered as one of the first Muslim movie actresses in Turkey debuting in 1923. Personal life She was born in 1896 to Şekip Bey, a prosecutor from profession, and his wife Refika in Kadıköy, Istanbul, Ottoman Empire. She began her primary education at Saint Antoine School on Büyükada, and went on at Kadıköy Terakki School for secondary education. Then, she studied at the French language Lycée Notre Dame de Sion Istanbul. She could speak French and Greek as foreign languages. Bedia Muvahhit was employed in 1914 as a switchboard operator at the state-owned telephone company in Istanbul becoming one of the first Muslim women in the Ottoman Empire to work at the public service sector. Following a campaign of a newly established journal and an association for defending women's rights, the post administration decided to replace the telephone operators, who were ...
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José Bedia Valdés
José Braulio Bedia Valdés (born January 13, 1959 in Havana, Cuba) is a Cuban painter currently residing in Florida. Bedia studied at the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes "San Alejandro" and then finished his art studies at the Instituto Superior de Arte in Havana. He escaped Cuba in 1990, settling initially in Mexico and subsequently, in 1993, in the United States. Selected individual exhibitions *1989 – ''Final del Centauro'' – Castillo de la Real Fuerza, Havana, Cuba. *1992 – ''"Jose Bedia: De Donde Vengo (Where I Come From)"'' – Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, CA. *1994 – ''José Bedia: De Donde Vengo'' – Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania. *2004 – ''Estremecimientos'' – Museo Extremeño e Iberoamericano de Arte Contemporaneo (MEIAC), Badajoz, Spain. *September 18, 2011 – January 8, 2012 – ''Transcultural Pilgrim: Three Decades of Work by José Bedia'' – Fowler Museum, UCLA. Collective exhibitions In 1978 he began parti ...
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Bedia, Spain
Bedia is a town and municipality located in the province of Biscay, in the autonomous community of Basque Country, northern Spain , image_flag = Bandera de España.svg , image_coat = Escudo de España (mazonado).svg , national_motto = ''Plus ultra'' (Latin)(English: "Further Beyond") , national_anthem = (English: "Royal March") , i .... References External links BEDIA in the Bernardo Estornés Lasa - Auñamendi Encyclopedia (Euskomedia Fundazioa) Municipalities in Biscay {{basque-geo-stub ...
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Bedia (village)
Bedia ( ka, ბედია ab, Бедиа) is a village in the Tkvarcheli District of Abkhazia. As a result of the Georgian dispute over the sovereignty of Abkhazia, Georgia claims the village as part of its Gali Municipality. As of 2011, the village had a population of 288, of which 85.5% of them were ethnic Georgians and 13.6% were ethnic Abkhaz, with 2 others living in the village. History According to the medieval Georgian Chronicles, Egros, son of Togarmah, inherited the land between the Likhi Range, Black Sea and upper Khazar River where he settled and found a city ''Egrisi'', which is now called Bedia. See also *Bedia Cathedral Bedia Cathedral ( ka, ბედიის მონასტერი) is a medieval Georgian Orthodox cathedral located in Bedia, in the Tkvarcheli district of Abkhazia (or Ochamchire Municipality according to the Georgia's subdivision), a dis ... References * Populated places in Tkvarcheli District Sukhum Okrug {{Abkhazia-geo ...
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Bedia (caste)
The Bedia are a community in India. They believe that they originally lived on Mohdipahar of Hazaribagh district and have descended from the union of Vedbansi prince with a Munda girl. The other view is that a section of the Kudmis were outcastes and came to be known as the Bedia or Wandering Kudmis. Origin The word ''bedia'' is a corrupt form of the Hindi word ''behara'', which means a forest dweller. They are a nomadic tribe, that had been notified under the Criminal Tribes Act. According to early British scholars, they were one of the many nomadic tribes found in North India, and were of the same stock as the Rajputs. According to their own traditions, they were originally Rajputs, who lost status, after their defeat at the hands of the Mughals. The community was connected with some bad works, as well as petty theft. They speak Awadhi and are found mainly in the districts of Bahraich, Barabanki, Basti, Agra, Faizabad, Gonda and Kanpur. After independence, they were den ...
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Bedia (Muslim Caste)
Shershabadia is a community found in the state of West Bengal, Bihar and Jharkhand in India. They belong to Shaikh community and also form a significant part of the Shaikhs of West Bengal and Bihar. Common surnames used by the community include Shekh, Sekh, Haque, Islam, Mondal.People of India Bihar Volume XVI Part Two edited by S Gopal & Hetukar Jha pages 876 to 877 Seagull Books Most of them are Sunni Muslims who associate with the Ahl-i Hadith movement. These people mostly live in chars and dubas (lower land) along Gangetic river lines from Katihar district of Bihar on the north bank and Rajmahal District of Jharkhand on the south bank to Murshidabad districts of West Bengal on the South bank and Malda district of West Bengal on the north bank. Terminology The word Shershabadia (from Persian: شرشابادیا) literally means (the language and/or the people) of the land known as Shershabad. The term is derived from the community's place of origin known as Jawar-e-Sarsabad o ...
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