Yemma Javanica
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Yemma Javanica
Yemma may refer to: * Yemma: mother in Arabic, Berber and Hebrew * ''Yemma'' (bug), a genus of stilt bugs * Yemma, a former village on the site of present-day Yavne'el, Israel * Yem people The Yem are an ethnic group living in south-western Ethiopia. Their native language is Yemsa, one of the Omotic languages, although many also speak Amharic. The neighbors of the Yem include the Gurage, Hadya, and Kembata to the east across the O ..., an ethnic group in south-western Ethiopia * Yama, a Hindu and Buddhist deity {{Disambiguation ...
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Yemma (bug)
''Yemma'' is a genus of stilt bugs in the family Berytidae. There are about five described species in ''Yemma''. Species These five species belong to the genus ''Yemma'': * '' Yemma exilis'' Horvath, G., 1905 * '' Yemma gracilis'' Linnavuori, R., 1974 * '' Yemma javanica'' Blote, H.C., 1945 * '' Yemma pericarti'' Stusak, 1984 * '' Yemma signatus'' (Hsiao, T.Y., 1974) c g Data sources: i = ITIS, c = Catalogue of Life, g = GBIF, b = Bugguide.net References Further reading * * * * External links * Berytidae Pentatomomorpha genera {{pentatomomorpha-stub ...
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Yavne'el
Yavne'el ( he, יַבְנְאֵל, ar, يفنيئيل) is a moshava and local council in the Northern District of Israel. Founded in 1901, it is one of the oldest rural Jewish communities in the country. According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), in it had a population of . In 2008 the population had been of 3,100, with a growth rate of 1.4%. History Archaeological overview Remains from the Late Bronze Age,Leibowitz 1995, cited in Hanna, 2017 Yavne’el/ref>Brink, van den, 2017 Yavne’el, Tel Yin’am/ref> Iron Age I–II, Persian, Hellenistic, Roman, late Byzantine,Hanna, 2009Yavne’el/ref> early MuslimHanna, 2017 Yavne’el/ref> and Mamluk periods have been found here. A residential building constructed in the Umayyad period that continued to be inhabited during the Abbasid period (eighth–tenth centuries CE) has been excavated here. Remains from the Mamluk period have also been found. Ottoman period Arab village During the Ottoman period the Muslim ...
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Yem People
The Yem are an ethnic group living in south-western Ethiopia. Their native language is Yemsa, one of the Omotic languages, although many also speak Amharic. The neighbors of the Yem include the Gurage, Hadya, and Kembata to the east across the Omo River and the Jimma Oromo to the south, north and west. History The first reference to Yem as a political unit is found, under the name of Jangero, in the victory song of King Yesaq (1412-1427) of the Christian kingdom of Ethiopia, as paying tribute in the form of horses to the king. The first European traveler to mention Yem was the European traveler Father Fernandez, who travelled through their homeland in 1614. Population Their number was not definitely known until recently, as Aklilu Yilma states, "Bender gives the estimate as '1000' (Bender 1976: 4), whereas the ''Ethnologue'' reported 1,000 to 4,000 Yemsa speakers in 1992. The report of the Central Statistical Office gives the 1984 census figures of the Yem people as 34,951 (C ...
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