Search references for MAZICES. Phrases containing MAZICES
See searches and references containing MAZICES!MAZICES
Late Antiquity term for Berbers
Pseudo-Hippolytus placed the Mazices on the same level as the Mauri, Gaetuli and Afri. In the last decade of the 4th century, the Mazices and Austurians began
Mazices
Ethnic group indigenous to North Africa
endonym Amazigh dates back to antiquity, as attested by groups such as the Mazices, and it remains in use today. The indigenous populations of the Maghreb
Berbers
Municipality in South Bohemian, Czech Republic
Mažice (German: Maschitz) is a municipality and village in Tábor District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 100 inhabitants
Mažice
Monk, priest and martyr in Egypt
ordained a priest. At about age 75, about the year 405 AD, word came that the Mazices, a group of Berbers, planned to attack the monastery. The brothers wanted
Moses_the_Black
Geographic depression in Beheira, Egypt
with the Muslim Abbasid government of Egypt. Scetis was attacked by the Mazices who "came sweeping off the Libyan desert" in 407-408 AD and was decimated
Wadi_El_Natrun
Family of languages and dialects Indigenous to North Africa
this endonym dates back to antiquity, as attested by groups such as the Mazices. It remains in use today, although others have their own terms to refer
Berber_languages
Person who suffers persecution and death for the faith
paganism. c. 450 – Moses the Black, Refused to flee an attack from a group of Mazices Raiders on his Monastery. c. 680 – Husayn ibn Ali, grandson of Muhammad
Martyr
Ethnic group
endonym Amazigh dates back to antiquity, as attested by groups such as the Mazices, and it remains in use today. During the Ottoman era, many Kabyles temporarily
Kabyle_diaspora
Egyptian desert father
Testaments, the old ascetic reverted to Orthodoxy. In 407/408 AD, as the Mazices invaded the wilderness of Scetes, Bishoy left and dwelt in the mountain
Pishoy
Egyptian Desert Father
abbot of the monastery he founded around the Tree of Obedience. When the Mazices invaded Scetes in 395, John fled the Nitrian Desert and went to live on
John_the_Dwarf
Ancient Libyan tribe
Hecataeus of Miletus and Maxyes by Herodotus, while the tribe was called Mazices and Mazax in Latin sources. The Meshwesh are known from ancient Egyptian
Meshwesh
Discussion of ethnonyms for the Imazighen
cultural claim. The name "Amazigh" is likely connected to the ancient Mazices, a Libyco-Berber people mentioned in classical sources. The medieval historian
Names_of_the_Berber_people
Longinus flee fame to Enaton. 407-408 1st destruction of Scetis by the Mazices. This marks the shifting of the center of Christian monasticism from Egypt
Chronology of early Christian monasticism
Chronology_of_early_Christian_monasticism
Desert Father
forced to leave due to raids on the monasteries and hermitages there by the Mazices (tribesmen from Libya). He relocated to Troe (near Memphis), and also spent
Arsenius_the_Great
Byzantine monk and writer (c. 550–619)
and where several monasteries in the Wadi El Natrun had been razed by Mazices where 3,500 monks who had lived there had now been dispersed into the Levant
John_Moschus
west as Africa Proconsularis and as far east as Egypt in league with the Mazices. The Austuriani may be behind the mysterious "Saturiani" against whom the
Austuriani
Manuscript
Isauri Phryges Persae The peoples that are in Mauretania: Quinquegentiani Mazices Barbares Bacuates Celtiberi ?Astures/?Turdetani Ausetani Carpetani Cantabri
Laterculus_Veronensis
Mountain in Egypt
Anthony until his death. When Scetis was destroyed in 395 by the Berbers (Mazices), John the Dwarf relocated to near Mount Colzim and lived only a day's
Mount_Colzim
Aspect of Czech grammar
pekouc/pečíc pekouce/pečíce tra trouc trouce bera berouc berouce maže mažíc mažíce Past transgressive (do)nes (do)nesši (do)nesše (pře)čet (pře)četši (pře)četše
Czech_conjugation
mazán mazána mazáno mazáni mazány mazána transgressives pres. maže mažíc mažíce past (vy)mazav (vy)mazavši (vy)mazavše infinitive inf. stem verbal noun
Morphological classification of Czech verbs
Morphological_classification_of_Czech_verbs
the Greeks and Romans, thus as Maxyes at the founding of Carthage, as Mazices in the Roman period at different places in the Mauretanian north coast;
History_of_early_Tunisia
Christian monks in Egypt killed by Berbers in 444
Great fled to Canopus at about this time owing to raids by the Berber Mazices, while Nestorius was released from his imprisonment during a Blemmyan attack
Forty-Nine_Martyrs_of_Scetis
suffered much for the true Faith." After the first attack of Scetis by the Mazices barbarians from 407 to 408 AD which led to the diaspora of the monks, the
Anoub
(town; Chomutov) Matějov (Žďár nad Sázavou) Mazelov (České Budějovice) Mažice (Tábor) Mcely (Nymburk) Meclov (Domažlice) Mečeříž (Mladá Boleslav) Měchenice
List of municipalities in the Czech Republic
List_of_municipalities_in_the_Czech_Republic
Place in Aïn Defla, Algeria
called Kherba are also in the commune. In Antiquity it was occupied by the Mazices tribes of the region Which played a part in the constitution of the pre-Roman
El_Amra
District in South Bohemian, Czech Republic
Komárov - Košice - Košín - Krátošice - Krtov - Libějice - Lom - Malšice - Mažice - Meziříčí - Mezná - Mladá Vožice - Mlýny - Myslkovice - Nadějkov - Nasavrky
Tábor_District
MAZICES
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Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Victorious
Girl/Female
Indian
Charm, Grace, Kindness
Girl/Female
Hindu
Goddess Lakshmi, Prosperous life
Boy/Male
Norse Scandinavian
Of the chosen.
Boy/Male
Muslim
One who gives health
Biblical
flight; proof; temptation; delicate
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Traditional
Prince
Girl/Female
Muslim
The name of a freed female slave
Girl/Female
Indian
Sita
Girl/Female
Biblical
That makes fruitful.
MAZICES
MAZICES
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MAZICES