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City in Gharbia Governorate, Egypt
Samannud (Arabic: سمنود Samannūd) is a city (markaz) located in Gharbia Governorate, Egypt. Known in classical antiquity as Sebennytos (Ancient Greek:
Samannud
Itjtawy Avaris Amarna Pi-Ramesses Tanis Bubastis Leontopolis Sais Mendes Samannud Alexandria Fustat Cairo List of cities and towns in Egypt The New Capital
List of historical capitals of Egypt
List_of_historical_capitals_of_Egypt
Governorate in Egypt
highest population density is found in Tanta and El Mahalla El Kubra, while Samannud is the smallest center. Basyoun has the lowest overall population, and
Gharbia_Governorate
Egyptian television presenter
book Inside Fallujah: the Unembedded Story. He was born in the city of Samannud, in Egypt, and graduated from the Mansoura University, with a bachelor's
Ahmed_Mansour_(journalist)
639–646 Rashidun Caliphate campaign
generals in charge of defending Samannud. Hearing of this, 'Amr went north to destroy this army. The two generals in Samannud refused to fight the Muslims
Arab_conquest_of_Egypt
Egyptian noble family
el-Emam: Judge of El Mahalla El Kubra. Judge Abu Bakr bin el-Emam: Judge of Samannud. Judge El-Mohib bin el-Emam: Judge of El Mahalla El Kubra, the deputy of
El-Emam_family
Egyptian economist and politician (1915–2013)
politician who served as minister of finance in the 1970s. Ismail was born in Samannud in March 1915. He hailed from a wealthy middle-class family. He attended
Ahmed_Abu_Ismail
Muslim term for areas under to Roman rule
Farbit Sa Al-Farma Al-Arish And the kuras of Batn al-Rif, which are: Busir Samannud Noosa Al-Awsiya Al-Nujoom Dakahla Tinnis Damietta And the kuras of al-Jazira
Kura (administrative division)
Kura_(administrative_division)
Revolt by Egyptian Coptic Christians, c. 720–832
interpreted as a kunya with Abū in Arabic. This revolt began in Shubra near Samannūd. According to Sāwīrus ibn al-Muqaffaʿ, multiple land and sea campaigns
Bashmurian_revolts
13th-century Egyptian Islamic scholar
to the countryside of Lower Egypt, from the village of Damira, close to Samannud on the eastern or Damietta branch of the Nile in the Delta. Since his youth
Al-Damiri
Egyptian Christian sect, 6th-9th centuries
converted back to orthodox miaphysitism by John of Sa and others by Isaac of Samannud. Around the same time, an enterprising Christian civil servant received
Barsanuphians
Ancient: "Zau") Saft el-Hinna (Ancient: "Per-Sopdu") Sebennytos (Modern: "Samannud", Ancient: "Tjebnutjer") Shagamba Suwa Taposiris Magna (Modern: "Abusir")
List of ancient Egyptian sites
List_of_ancient_Egyptian_sites
Parts of world travelled by explorer Ibn Battuta
Damietta (Dimyāt), Egypt Faraskur (Fāriskūr), Egypt Sebennytos or Samannoud (Samannūd), Egypt Cairo (Miṣr), Egypt Biba, Egypt 28°55′19″N 30°59′02″E / 28.922°N
List of places visited by Ibn Battuta
List_of_places_visited_by_Ibn_Battuta
revolt (749) Egyptian rebels Umayyad Caliphate Victory The Bashmurians took Samannūd and sacked Rosetta Mina, son of Apacyrus ? Makurian invasion of southern
List_of_wars_involving_Egypt
el-Emam: Judge of El Mahalla El Kubra. Judge Abu Bakr bin el-Emam: Judge of Samannud. Judge El-Mohib bin el-Emam: Judge of El Mahalla El Kubra, the deputy of
List_of_political_families
3rd-century BCE history of Egypt written in Greek, now lost
in the temple at Heliopolis—who was likely native to Sebennytus (modern Samannud) in the Nile Delta. He lived at the dawn of the Hellenistic period (323–30
Aegyptiaca
Prefect of Egypt
generals in charge of defending Samannud. Hearing of this, 'Amr went north to destroy this army. The two generals in Samannud refused to fight the Muslims
Theodore_(prefect_of_Egypt)
Village in Dakahlia Governorate, Egypt
Census of Egypt recorded Talbant Aga as a nahiyah under the district of Mit Samannud in Dakahlia Governorate; at that time, the population of the town was 609
Talbant_Aga
Village in Gharbia Governorate, Egypt
secundus. After the Arab conquest of Egypt the city was known as Busir Samannud (Arabic: بوصير سمنود) and it was the seat of a bishopric. The local Copts
Abusir_Bana
Sadd el-Kafara Saft el-Hinna Saint Catherine, Egypt Sais, Egypt Saldae Samannud Sanam, Sudan Sassura Scebatiana Sebilian Sebkha-El-Coursia Sedeinga pyramids
History_of_North_Africa
Meryetneith Medinet Habu – Khedebneithirbinet I Necho II – – Psamtik II – Samannud (?) – Takhuit Psamtik II – – Apries Ankhnesneferibre Athribis – Tentkheta
List of ancient Egyptian royal consorts
List_of_ancient_Egyptian_royal_consorts
Egyptian Islamic scholar and judge (1386 – 1442)
a great and famous religious scholar, and his brother was the judge of Samannud, Judge Abu Bakr bin el-Emam. El-Mohib bin el-Emam grew up with a good religious
El-Mohib_bin_el-Emam
640 battle between the Byzantine Empire and Rashidun Caliphate
generals in charge of defending Samannud. Hearing of this, 'Amr went north to destroy this army. The two generals in Samannud refused to fight the Muslims
Siege_of_Babylon_Fortress
Umayyad statesman, official and governor
role in the revolt but states that uprisings took place in Bana, Sa, and Samannud, and that the resulting fighting between the Christians and Muslims was
Al-Hurr_ibn_Yusuf
French army general (1771–1835)
1799, and that August defeated Murad Bey at the battles of El Ganaim and Samannud. He was appointed adjutant général chef de brigade and governor of the
Charles_Antoine_Morand
City in Dakahlia, Egypt
locals, in alliance with the Mamluks, attacked a French warship coming from Samannud, seizing it and its weapons, including four cannons, and killing those
Mit_Ghamr
3 Sakuji Yoshimura Salima Ikram Salitis Sally Katary Salomo of Makuria Samannud Sami Gabra Samuel Birch (Egyptologist) Samuel Sharpe (scholar) Sanakht
Index of ancient Egypt–related articles
Index_of_ancient_Egypt–related_articles
SAMANNUD
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Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Malayalam, Marathi
An Ancient Saint
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
With Handsome Body
Girl/Female
Tamil
Elevated, Lofty, Incomparable
Female
Norwegian
Danish and Norwegian form of English Abigail, ABIGAEL means "father rejoices."
Biblical
Jehudi, praising; conferring
Male
English
English surname transferred to forename use, derived from a place name MURGATROYD means "the clearing belonging to Margaret."
Surname or Lastname
English (Kentish)
English (Kentish) : from a medieval personal name, Pack, possibly a survival of the Old English personal name Pacca, although this is found only as a place name element and appears to have died out fairly early on in the Old English period. The Middle English personal name is more likely to be a derivative of the Latin Christian name Paschalis (see Pascal).Jewish (Ashkenazic) : metonymic occupational name for a wholesale trader, from German Pack ‘package’ (see Packer).Anglicized form of Dutch Pak.
Male
Hebrew
(חֲבַקּוּק) Hebrew name CHABAQQUWQ means "embrace." In the bible, this is the name of a prophet.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Libby.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Good Intention
SAMANNUD
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