Hashem the Gizonite
______________________________
/ Jesus -Curses the Fig - Tree /
|
/ Michael / is / An Angel / Holding / The Key to the Bottomle-ss Pit / and / A Great Chain /
|
____|________/ Who is ? of Ahlai / Who is ? of Bozrah / of / Who is ? of Zochar /_____|____
|
/ "You Must Be Born Again" /
|
/ Bee - Koz /
|
/ The Men of Iconium /
|
/ Our Father's Sinned / Who's Father Sin ? / Your First Father Sinned / Sin of Your Father of Sinai /
|
/ Jonah the son of Amitta /
|
/ Avvim / of / Adam / of / City of Adam / and Eve / of / Ninevah /
|
/ Nic-olia-tan-s / of / Hoopoe, and the Bat / of / Hathath / Hathach / Hatched /
|
/ Feather of Hen's of Og / of / Knessets / of / The Eagle of Saladin /
|
/ Axe-Men / of Acts of Luke / of / Lukud of Likhi / Hatched / Under A Kamon /
|
/ Beth -/ Twin-Gazelles that Grazes among the Lilies /- Baal /
|
/ So you shall purge the evil from your midst /
|
/ Up Root the Weeds of / Debauchery / of / Those Who -Despise ? /
|
/ Humpty Dumpty / of / Anuki / of / Aztec -Incah--Micah / Hid Them Selves / Behind-America /
|
_________of_________
|
/ Avvim / of / Ga-Gaza / Ge-zion / Ha-shem the Gi-Gizonite / Go-iz-oz-on-ite / Gu-uz-o-nite /
|
/ Leshem / of / The Inheritance for Dan / of / Ancestors /
|
/ Tur-kish of Syria / of / Syrians from Kir ? / of / Ur- of Syrians from Kir ? / of / Ur of Chaldeans /
|
/ Asa of Amasiah of Amasai of Asaiah of Asarel of Asahel of Amaziah of Amasa of Masa /
|
/ Tarshish-Portug-ese / Kar-tah / Ker-ioth / Kir-Qatar-Atar / Kor-ah / Kurd-ish / Rushash-Ukraine /
|
/ Chaldean / Aramean / Judeans / Haes-mone-an / Sabeans /
|
/ Kingdoms of / Edom (that is, Esau) / of / Descendants of- Five Wives of Esau who Intermarried at Seir /
|
/ Potters / of / Elkanah / of / Jeroham of Gedor / of / Eliel the Mahavite / of / Pashhur / of / Immer /
|
/ Their Elders /-/ Elkanah /-Baal-Hanan-Dynasty /-Shem / Elhanan /-/ Head and Tail /
|
/ Mad- Med- Mid- Mod- Mud- / of / Concubine -/ Of - Sons and Daughtes / of Keturah, /
|
/ Midian / of / Trader / Dealer / Merchant / of / Passed By- / By- /
|
[ Esau- Sells His Birthright ] Who is ? of-Transgression of House of Jacob /
|
/ Ishmael / As for / Naomi / Who is ? /-Widowed / As For Me (Call me Mara) / of / M-Arah /
|
___________of___________
|
/ Jether the Ishmaelite /-is-/ Jether / of / Jetur of Malchuth /-is-/ Ithra / the Ishmaelite /
|
/ She-Bears - Cubs of Seleu-CIA / of / Jair and Tola / of / Ptolema-ic of Horites of Pal-tith /
|
/ Korah's Rebellion / Moab Rebelled (Kir-hareseth) / Rebellion of Sheba /
|
/ The Senate / of / On the Hill / of / Keilah the Garmite / of / Zabdiel son of Haggedolim /
|
/ The Great / Sham / Shem / Shim / Sho-Mr-ron / Shu-math-ites / of / Shunammite /
|
/ Three -/ of / Leshem / of / The Inheritance for Dan / of / Ancestors / of / King Hiram / of / Tyre /
|
/ Micah and The Levite / A Levite and His Concubine / Micah and the Carved Image /
|
/ Has-monean / of / Ha-shem / of / Ha-shum / of / The Manean / of / Ataroth / Atarah / Atroth /
|
/ The Great / Sham / Shem / Shim / Sho-Mr-ron / Shu-math-ites / of / Shunammite /
|
/ Carites / of / Medan / of / Medes / of / Midian /
|
/ The Three -/ of / The Drunk / of / The H-ash- Leaves / of / The Mandrake /
|
/ S-ham- / Ha-shem / He-llenis / Shom-er / Hi-llel- / Ho-bab / Hu-shim / Shu-math-ite /
|
/ Hasmonean / of / Hashum-Hashabiah / of the Hushathite of the Zerahites /
|
/ Hasmon-ean / of / Ha-shem / of / Hasham/Chusham/Hushim / of the Zerahites /
|
/ Hasmonean - Has-mon-ean / of / Maccabees / Bees / of / Alphaeus / of / Janiah /
|
/ The / Hasmonean / Scribes / of / Menahem / of / Maacah / of / Maccabees / Bees /
|
/ Pashhur / of / Shahar / of / Mesha king of Moab / of / Sephar / of / Joktan /
|
/ The Princes of Zadok -the priest / of Nobles who Arrived in Geneva of Munich are Eunuchs /
|
/ Belteshazzar / Belteshazzar / of / Sheshbazzar of Damascus /
|
/ The Princes / of / Hero's of Moab / of / Buk-ki the son of Jogli /
|
/ Ptolema-ic / of / Publius / of / Syracuse,/ Sicily / of / Silesia / of / Cilicia / of / Seleu-cia /
|
/ Hadadezer / of / Ben-Hadad / of / Hadad-Hada / of / Ben-hadad / of / Hadad-Ezer /
|
/ A Vision of a Horseman(Riders) and Four Horses and Chariots and Horns and Craftsman /
|
/ Who is ? of Jordan / of / Hashemite Kingdom / of / Who is ? of Raamah of Cush /
__________________________________________________________________________
| | |
/ House of Saud // Maacah /
|
/ City of Palms /________________
/ Ha-shem / | / Curtains / Palms / | / Scarlet / ________________________ / "Beyond The Euphrates" / and / "Beyond the Jordan" / ______________________ | |
/ Ben-Jamin-nite / |
____|___________________________|_________________________|______
/ S-ham- / Ha-shem / He-llenis / Shom-er / Hi-llel- / Ho-bab / Hu-shim / Shu-math-ite /
|
/ The Princes of / Z-ado-k / of / Sh-ado-w / of / Shadow-Governor-ment / of / Tir-shatha /
|
/ G-az-a / of / Ez-ion-Geber / of / Iz-har / of / Mer-oz / of / Tamm-uz /
|
/ Mizpah /
|
/ Red-Scarlet /
|
/ Mede-/ Midian /-Medan /
|
/ Medium / of / Medes / Median / of / Medan /
|
/ Beth- / West- / Madai / Medin / - East / -Baal /
|
/ Zerah of Bozrah /
|
/ Jedidiah of Bathseba /
|
/ Hasham / Hushim / Hushah /
|
/ House of Saud /
|
________________________of________________________
|
/ Menachem /
|
/ Mash / of / Mesh / of / Lamech / of / Meshech /
|
/ Ha-shem / the Gizonite / of / Shemer / of / Geshem the Arab /
|
/ Hashum-Hashabiah / of the Hushathite of the Zerahites /
|
/ The House of Shiloh / of / Who is ? of The House of Eli / of / Sons of Shechem /
|
/ The Three / Twins of Thomas / " YOU ARE THE MAN "666" / of / Ewe / of / Jewel /
|
/ She-Bears - Cubs / of / Of the sons of Bani / of / Shethar-Boz-enai / of / Bear -Orion- Pleiades /
|
/ Micah and The Levite / A Levite and His Concubine / Micah and the Carved Image /
|
/ Of the sons of Bani / of / Meshullam / son of / Shepahtiah the son of Mattan -The Priest of Baal /
|
____________________________of____________________________
|
/ Sir / -are- / Lords / Rulers / Daites / and / Knights /
|
/ Lyre / Y Eye I / L-ir-e / 's ? /
|
/ Assyria / Y-Eye-I / Assir /
|
/ Ash-/ Asshur /-Hur /
|
/ Hasham/Chusham/Hushim / of the Zerahites /
| | | |
/ Ham / Cush / Hur- / Moab / of Seir / of Timnath-Serah /
|
/ Midian / Avi /
|
/ Chushim /
|
/ Ashhur /
|
/ Helah and Naarah /
|
/ Haahashtari /
|
/ Hesmonian / Hasmonean / of / Heshmon / of / Hashmonah / of / Heshbon /
|
/ Hadad-Ezer / Ben-hadad / Eli-Ezer /
|
/ Ke-dar / Kad-esh / Had-ar /
|
/ Kedesh in Galilee /
|
/ Rezin King of Syria /
|
/ Ezion-geber in the wilderness of Zin (That is, Kadesh) /
|
/ A Man of Asshur /
|
/ Bela, (that is Zoar )
|
/ Hosea took / Gomer the daughter of Diblaim /
|
/ Intermarried /
|
/ Daughters of the People /
|
/ "Abimelech Conspiracy" / Eli, Eli / Eloi / "Gibeonite Desception" /
_________________
/ Hebrew / -is- / Greek /
|
/ Ramathite / are / H-ama-thites / of / Canaan /
|
/ A Goat Who is ? of Ram Who is ? of Alemann-ic Who is ? of Arama-ic Who is ? of Arab-ic /
|
/ Abi-melech-Conspiracy" / Timber / and / Stones / of / "Gibeonite Desception" /
|
/ Ham- Ar-ama-ic -Gibeon /
|
/ Eloim, Eloim / of / Ahlai / of / Gibeath-elohim /
|
/ Kesed son of Dumah / of / Eli- / Eloi / Eli- / of / Kezem son of Kedar /
|
/ Ahimelech / Ahi- / Ahi-tub / Tub- / -al / Tubal-Cain / Tu-bal / Abi-tub / Abi- / Abi-melech /
|
/ Cretans / of / Manaen / of / Manoah / of / Maon / Of / Koz /
|
/ Has-monean / of / Ha-shem / of / Ha-shum / of / Manean /
|
/ Called by their Name /
|
/ Abdon the son of Achiram the Gomerite /
|
/ Ri- / Eri-rites / Amorites / Horites / Merarites / Geshu-rites / Nazirite / the Gomerite /
|
/ Matrites / of Edom of Sodom / of Seir /
|
/ The Priests of Mattan of Baal /
|
/ Pledges / Set Up In Secret / Oaths /
|
/ Leader of Marauding Bandits /
|
/ ISIS /
|
/ Carites of Tanners of Carchemish of Kartah of / Bahrain / of Kernainia of Thebes / of / Bela /
|
/ Great Ones / of / Assyria / Y-Eye-I / Assir / of / Pas-dammim /
_____________________________
Judgment on Arrogant- Assyria
Is not Calno like Carchemish? Is not- Hamath like Arpad? Is not- Samaria like Damascus?
Is not Calno like Carchemish? Is not Hamath like Arpad? Is not Samaria like Damascus?
Isaiah 10:8-10 (in Context) Isaiah 10 (Whole Chapter) Other Translations
____________________________________________________________________________________
/ Zerah of Bozrah /
|
/ Jedidiah of Bathseba /
|
/ Hasham / Hushim / Hushah /
|
_______|________
/ Mocha /
|
/ The Body of Mo-ses /
|
/ Chal-col /
|
/ Enoch / of / Maoch / of / Maoch-(Maacah) /
|
/ Eli- / is Greek /
|
/ Sanballat /
/ Adin / Sabeans / Ta- / iz- / zz- / Sa- / ana- / -aa / Ben-Jamin-nite /
/ Weave /
/ Cushan-Rishathaim /
Its capital was Sana`a until 1948, then Ta'izz.
Ta'izz (Arabic: تعز Taʿizz), or Taiz, is a city in the Yemeni Highlands, near the famous Mocha port on the Red Sea, lying at an elevation of about 1,400 metres above sea level. It is the capital of Ta'izz Governorate. With a population of over 600,000 in 2005, it is the third largest city in Yemen after the capital Sana'a and the southern port of Aden.
Ta'izz has a dramatic setting where the roads run up and down the mountain sides. Above the city rises the 3,006 metres high Sabir Mountain.
The city is famous for the ancient Jewish Sharab.
Zaydis, like Sunni Muslims, further reject the notion of Occultation (ghayba) of the Imām.
Like the Nizaris , they believe in a living visible Imām.
_________________
/ Assyria / Y-Eye-I / Assir /
/ The Plains /
/ Timnah / For Ourselves / Tanner -Tartak- Tabeel / Assir / Temeni /
Ta'izz was refortified by Salah ad-Din’s brother, Taktakeen, the Ayyubid.
The region is sometime subdivided into two parts, Tihamat Al-Hejaz (northern part) and Tihamat ʿAsir(southern part).[1] The Yemeni part (Tihamat Al-Yaman) is an extension of Tihamat ʿAsir.[2] The plain is constricted and attains its greatest widths (60 to 80 km) south of Medina and south of Mecca.[1]
The cities of Yanbu, Jeddah and Al Qunfudhah are located in the Hejazi part of Tihamah.
______________________
/ Jazan /
/ Jaziz / Jazer /
/ House of Saud / Figs / Ja- / az- / za- / -an / Azaniah / Jaazaniah /
The Asiri -Yemeni part of the Tihamah plain includes the cities of Jizan and Al Hudaydah (Hodeida).
Jazan (Arabic: جازان jazān), also spelled Jizan, Gizan or Gazan, is a port city and the capital of Jizan Region, which lies in the southwest corner of Saudi Arabia and directly north of the border with Yemen. Jazan City is situated on the coast of the Red Sea and serves a large agricultural heartland that has a population of 1.5 million, according to a 2010 census. The area is noted for its high-quality production of tropical fruits like mango, figs, and papaya.
Jizan is the poorest city in Saudi Arabia. 34% of Saudi families in Jizan live in poverty.
The inhabitants of Jizan are Arab and almost entirely Sunni Muslim.
______________________
/ Adin / Sabeans / Hod- / ei- / -ida /
Until Aden and Hodeida (Al Hudaydah) eclipsed it in the 19th century, Mocha was the principal port for Yemen's capital Sana'a.
______________________
/ Elders / Merchants / Princes /
|
/ Simon of Cyrene / Artisans / Simon the Tanners /
The city was known for producing striped coarse cotton cloth, woven by hand. The artisans making the cloth were relocated to Al Hudaydah from
Zabīd and Beit el-Faki due to tribal conflict.[4] The city was also a center for tanning and sandal making.[4]
The temperatures in Tihamah are probably some of the hottest on earth. Tihamah in Arabic means severe heat and lack of wind.
_______________________________
/ Ottoman /
|
/ Is not Hamath Like Arpad ? /
|
/ Ti-hamath / Mamre /
In 1849, the Ottoman Empire occupied the coastal Tihamah region to put pressure on the Zaiddiyah Imam to sign a treaty recognizing Ottoman suzerain
and allowing for a small Ottoman force to be stationed in Sana`a.
__________________________
Suzerainty (/ˈsjuːzərənti/ or /ˈsjuːzərɛnti/) occurs where a region or people is a tributary to a more powerful entity which controls its foreign affairs while allowing the tributary vassal state internal autonomy.[1]
The dominant entity in the suzerainty relationship, or the more powerful entity itself, is called asuzerain. The term suzerainty was originally used to describe the relationship between the Ottoman Empire and its surrounding regions. It differs from sovereignty in that the tributary enjoys some (often limited) self-rule.
A suzerain can also refer to a feudal lord, to whom vassals must pay tribute.
Although it is a concept which has existed in a number of historical empires, it is a concept that is very difficult to describe using 20th- or 21st-century theories of international law, in which sovereignty either exists or does not.
While a sovereign nation can agree by treaty to become a protectorate of a stronger power,
modern international law does not recognize any way of making this relationship compulsory on the weaker power.
/ Mocha /
|
/ The Body of Mo-ses /
|
/ Chal-col /
|
/ Enoch / of / Maoch / of / Maoch-(Maacah) /
|
/ Eli- / is Greek /
|
/ Sanballat /
/ Adin / Sabeans / Ta- / iz- / zz- / Sa- / ana- / -aa / Ben-Jamin-nite /
/ Weave /
/ Cushan-Rishathaim /
Its capital was Sana`a until 1948, then Ta'izz.
Ta'izz (Arabic: تعز Taʿizz), or Taiz, is a city in the Yemeni Highlands, near the famous Mocha port on the Red Sea, lying at an elevation of about 1,400 metres above sea level. It is the capital of Ta'izz Governorate. With a population of over 600,000 in 2005, it is the third largest city in Yemen after the capital Sana'a and the southern port of Aden.
Ta'izz has a dramatic setting where the roads run up and down the mountain sides. Above the city rises the 3,006 metres high Sabir Mountain.
The city is famous for the ancient Jewish Sharab.
Zaydis, like Sunni Muslims, further reject the notion of Occultation (ghayba) of the Imām.
Like the Nizaris , they believe in a living visible Imām.
_________________
/ Assyria / Y-Eye-I / Assir /
/ The Plains /
/ Timnah / For Ourselves / Tanner -Tartak- Tabeel / Assir / Temeni /
Ta'izz was refortified by Salah ad-Din’s brother, Taktakeen, the Ayyubid.
The region is sometime subdivided into two parts, Tihamat Al-Hejaz (northern part) and Tihamat ʿAsir(southern part).[1] The Yemeni part (Tihamat Al-Yaman) is an extension of Tihamat ʿAsir.[2] The plain is constricted and attains its greatest widths (60 to 80 km) south of Medina and south of Mecca.[1]
The cities of Yanbu, Jeddah and Al Qunfudhah are located in the Hejazi part of Tihamah.
______________________
/ Jazan /
/ Jaziz / Jazer /
/ House of Saud / Figs / Ja- / az- / za- / -an / Azaniah / Jaazaniah /
The Asiri -Yemeni part of the Tihamah plain includes the cities of Jizan and Al Hudaydah (Hodeida).
Jazan (Arabic: جازان jazān), also spelled Jizan, Gizan or Gazan, is a port city and the capital of Jizan Region, which lies in the southwest corner of Saudi Arabia and directly north of the border with Yemen. Jazan City is situated on the coast of the Red Sea and serves a large agricultural heartland that has a population of 1.5 million, according to a 2010 census. The area is noted for its high-quality production of tropical fruits like mango, figs, and papaya.
Jizan is the poorest city in Saudi Arabia. 34% of Saudi families in Jizan live in poverty.
The inhabitants of Jizan are Arab and almost entirely Sunni Muslim.
______________________
/ Adin / Sabeans / Hod- / ei- / -ida /
Until Aden and Hodeida (Al Hudaydah) eclipsed it in the 19th century, Mocha was the principal port for Yemen's capital Sana'a.
______________________
/ Elders / Merchants / Princes /
|
/ Simon of Cyrene / Artisans / Simon the Tanners /
The city was known for producing striped coarse cotton cloth, woven by hand. The artisans making the cloth were relocated to Al Hudaydah from
Zabīd and Beit el-Faki due to tribal conflict.[4] The city was also a center for tanning and sandal making.[4]
The temperatures in Tihamah are probably some of the hottest on earth. Tihamah in Arabic means severe heat and lack of wind.
_______________________________
/ Ottoman /
|
/ Is not Hamath Like Arpad ? /
|
/ Ti-hamath / Mamre /
In 1849, the Ottoman Empire occupied the coastal Tihamah region to put pressure on the Zaiddiyah Imam to sign a treaty recognizing Ottoman suzerain
and allowing for a small Ottoman force to be stationed in Sana`a.
__________________________
Suzerainty (/ˈsjuːzərənti/ or /ˈsjuːzərɛnti/) occurs where a region or people is a tributary to a more powerful entity which controls its foreign affairs while allowing the tributary vassal state internal autonomy.[1]
The dominant entity in the suzerainty relationship, or the more powerful entity itself, is called asuzerain. The term suzerainty was originally used to describe the relationship between the Ottoman Empire and its surrounding regions. It differs from sovereignty in that the tributary enjoys some (often limited) self-rule.
A suzerain can also refer to a feudal lord, to whom vassals must pay tribute.
Although it is a concept which has existed in a number of historical empires, it is a concept that is very difficult to describe using 20th- or 21st-century theories of international law, in which sovereignty either exists or does not.
While a sovereign nation can agree by treaty to become a protectorate of a stronger power,
modern international law does not recognize any way of making this relationship compulsory on the weaker power.
________________
/ Ottoman /
|
/ Ben-Jamin-nite /
|
/ Elders / Merchants / Princes /
__________________________
/ Absalom / Yemenite Jews / Goldsmiths / Merchants /
Ta'izz has a dramatic setting where the roads run up and down the mountain sides. Above the city rises the 3,006 metres high Sabir Mountain.
The city is famous for the ancient Jewish Sharab.
Jewish Sharab (Arabic: اليهود من شراب والسلام, Al- Yahud al- Sharab as' Salam) is an ancient Jewish quarter in the city of Ta'izz,[1] Ta'izz Governorate, Yemen established around 130 CE and dismantled around 1940, and was one of the most illustrious places of Jewish settlement in Yemen. Many distinguished Jewish personalities were born there, including R. Shalom Sharabi, R. Mordechai Sharabi and R. Shalom Shabazi. It was an important place of Torah learning, and home to many Yeshivot and schools. It had a population of over 10,000 Jews and was a major industrial centre of Yemen, where goldsmiths' work, weaving, commerce, silk trading and shoemaking were the main industries of the day. The Sharabi Jews have a slightly different pronunciation than most other Yemenite Jews.
_______________
/ Mulberry /
/ Silk Brought to Egypt by the Greeks /
A variety of wild silks, produced by caterpillars other than the mulberry silkworm, have been known and used in China, South Asia,
and Europe since ancient times.
/ Ottoman /
|
/ Ben-Jamin-nite /
|
/ Elders / Merchants / Princes /
__________________________
/ Absalom / Yemenite Jews / Goldsmiths / Merchants /
Ta'izz has a dramatic setting where the roads run up and down the mountain sides. Above the city rises the 3,006 metres high Sabir Mountain.
The city is famous for the ancient Jewish Sharab.
Jewish Sharab (Arabic: اليهود من شراب والسلام, Al- Yahud al- Sharab as' Salam) is an ancient Jewish quarter in the city of Ta'izz,[1] Ta'izz Governorate, Yemen established around 130 CE and dismantled around 1940, and was one of the most illustrious places of Jewish settlement in Yemen. Many distinguished Jewish personalities were born there, including R. Shalom Sharabi, R. Mordechai Sharabi and R. Shalom Shabazi. It was an important place of Torah learning, and home to many Yeshivot and schools. It had a population of over 10,000 Jews and was a major industrial centre of Yemen, where goldsmiths' work, weaving, commerce, silk trading and shoemaking were the main industries of the day. The Sharabi Jews have a slightly different pronunciation than most other Yemenite Jews.
_______________
/ Mulberry /
/ Silk Brought to Egypt by the Greeks /
A variety of wild silks, produced by caterpillars other than the mulberry silkworm, have been known and used in China, South Asia,
and Europe since ancient times.
_________________
/ Eli- / Zohar / -Eloi /
|
/ Nazirite /
|
/ Goiim from Galilee /
|
/ Ahiezer son of Ammishaddai of Dan / Shelumiel son of Zurishaddai of Simeon /
____________________________________________________________
/ Eli- / Zohar / -Eloi /
|
/ Nazirite /
|
/ Goiim from Galilee /
|
/ Ahiezer son of Ammishaddai of Dan / Shelumiel son of Zurishaddai of Simeon /
____________________________________________________________
Sar Shalom Sharabi (Hebrew: שר שלום מזרחי דידיע שרעבי), also known as the Rashash, the Shemesh orRibbi Shalom Mizraḥi deyedi`a Sharabi (1720–1777), was a Yemenite-Israeli Jewish Rabbi, Halachist, Chazzan and Kabbalist. In later life, he became the Rosh Yeshiva of Bet El Yeshiva in the Old City of Jerusalem. His daughter married Rabbi Hayyim Abraham Gagin of Jerusalem, making him the great-great-grandfather of Shem Tob Gaguine, the "Keter Shem Tob."
_______________________________ / Tanner / Sephardi / The Tannaim were the Rabbinic sages In Israel he made a strong impression on the local rabbinic sages, and is frequently mentioned in their books. At Bet El Yeshiva, he belonged to a group of 12mekubalim along with Hida, Rabbi Yom-Tov Algazi and other sages of Sephardic and Yemenite congregations. He remained at Bet El Yeshiva until his death, eventually becoming Rosh Yeshiva. He himself was a devotee of the teachings of Rabbi Isaac Luria, and a principal innovator within Lurianic Kabbalah. Students of Lithuanian and Hasidic yeshiva gedolas usually learn in yeshiva until they get married. |
The Shia Imami Ismaili Tariqa, also referred to as Nizari Ismailism (Arabic: النزاريون an-Nizāriyyūn), is a path within the fold of Shia Islam and emphasizes social justice, pluralism, and human reason within the framework of the mystical tradition of Islam. The Shia Imami Ismaili Tariqa is the second largest branch of Shia Islam and forms the majority of the Ismaili (Arabic: اسماعیلیه) denomination. There are an estimated 15 million Shia Imami Ismailis residing in more than 25 countries and territories.
The Shia Imami Ismailis became a distinct branch after the Nizari-Mustaali schism that occurred in 1095. Those Ismailis who pledged allegiance to Nizar became headquartered at Alamut under Dai Hassan-i Sabbah and the Assassins, and the early propagation of the faith's doctrine was based from there. Shia Imami Ismaili teachings affirm the Shahada, the Islamic tenet that "there is no god but the One God, and Muhammad is the prophet of God." Like all Shia, Imami Ismailis regard Muhammad as having selected Ali by divine decree to succeed him as Imam, or spiritual leader of the Muslim community. The Shia Imami Ismailis believe this institution, called Imamate, has continued through an unbroken hereditary succession to the present era under the aegis of the 49th Imam, Prince Shah Karim al-Husayni Aga Khan IV. Zaydis, like Sunni Muslims, further reject the notion of Occultation (ghayba) of the Imām. Like the Nizaris , they believe in a living visible Imām. Adherents of Twelver Shī'ism are commonly referred to as Twelvers, which is derived from their belief in twelve divinely ordained leaders, known as the Twelve Imāms, and their belief that the Mahdi will be the returned Twelfth Imam who disappeared and is believed by Twelvers to be in occultation. A majority of Shī'a Muslims are Twelvers. The term Shi'a Muslim may also be used to refer to Zaydis and Ismailis. |
______|____________________________________________|________
/ Hazor in Galilee / Curse "Meroz"/
____________________________|____________________________
/ Egypt / Eg-laim / H-eg-laim-Gera / Ha-shem / the Gi-zonite / Gimzo / G-ir-zite / of Gi-rgashite /
|
/ Gi-beon /--/ Gi-bbethon-Dan /--/ Gi-lead /
of
/ Debir King of Eglon /---/ Eglon King of Moab /
of
/ Gilgal / Giloh / Shiloh / Beth-millo /
|
/ Balak / "Curse Meroz" / at Halak /
____________________________|____________________________
/ Hazor in Galilee / Curse "Meroz"/
____________________________|____________________________
/ Egypt / Eg-laim / H-eg-laim-Gera / Ha-shem / the Gi-zonite / Gimzo / G-ir-zite / of Gi-rgashite /
|
/ Gi-beon /--/ Gi-bbethon-Dan /--/ Gi-lead /
of
/ Debir King of Eglon /---/ Eglon King of Moab /
of
/ Gilgal / Giloh / Shiloh / Beth-millo /
|
/ Balak / "Curse Meroz" / at Halak /
____________________________|____________________________
Hasidism comprises part of contemporary Haredi Judaism, alongside the previous Talmudic Lithuanian-Yeshiva approach
and
the Sephardi and Mizrahi traditions. -Yeminite?
and
the Sephardi and Mizrahi traditions. -Yeminite?
Elon Moreh (Hebrew: אֵלוֹן מוֹרֶה) is an Israeli settlement located in the Samarian hills of the West Bank northeast of Nablus on the slopes of the Mount Kabir ridge.
The international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law, but the Israeli government disputes this.
The international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law, but the Israeli government disputes this.
___________________
And In Yemen -Shi'a
______________________
/ Five /
Zaidiyya or Zaidism (Arabic: الزيدية az-zaydiyya, adjective form Zaidi or Zaydi) is a Shi'a Muslim school of thought named after Zayd ibn ʻAlī, the grandson of Husayn ibn ʻAlī. Followers of the Zaydi Islamic jurisprudence are called Zaydi Shi'a and are particularly prevalent in Yemen.
The Zaydi Shi'a have a unique approach within Shi'a Islamic thought.
Its adherents are also known as Fivers.
__________________________________________________________________________________
/ "Beyond The Euphrates" / and / "Beyond the Jordan" /
|
_____________of_____________
|
/ Zer / Eli-e-zer / Arel-i / Ele-az-ar / Azar /
|
/ Asa-rel / Az-arel / Ar-iel / Ash-arel-ah /
|
/ Asiel / Asriel / Uz-z-iel /Azriel / Aziel /
|
/ Azriel-ites / Isra-eli-tes / Asrielites /
of
/ Ishma-eli-tes /
of
/ S-urel-i / Asa-rel / Az-arel / Ar-iel / Ash-arel-ah / of / Arel-i /
of
/ Shur / of / Hur / of / Ur /
of
/ Har- / Her- / Ach-Hir-am / Hor- / Hur- /
|
/ Called By Their Name /
of
/ The Levant /
|
_______________of_______________
|
/ Ottoman /
|
/ Ben-Jamin-nite /
|
/ Elders / Merchants / Princes /
|
/ Ramathite / are / H-ama-thites / of / Canaan /
|
/ A Goat is a Ram / is / Alemann-ic / of / Arama-ic / and / Arab-ic /
of
/ Ham- Ar-ama-ic -Gibeon /
of
/ Ptole-maic / Ar-abi-c / Alemanna-ic / Ara-maic / of / Put /
of
/ Gershonites / of / Ge-rmany / Y-Eye-I / Ger-Mani-ic / of / Gomer /
|
/ Eloim, Eloim / of / Ahlai / of / Gibeath-elohim /
of
/ Eli / Eloi / Eli /
of
/ House of Eli /
|
/ Ahimelech / Ahi- / Ahi-tub / Tub- / -al / Tubal-Cain / Tu-bal / Abi-tub / Abi- / Abi-melech /
|
/ Sir / -are- / Lords / Rulers / Daites / and / Knights /
|
/ Lyre / Y Eye I / L-ir-e / 's ? /
|
/ Assyria / Y-Eye-I / Assir /
|
/ Arab-ic /
______________________________________________________________________
And In Yemen -Shi'a
______________________
/ Five /
Zaidiyya or Zaidism (Arabic: الزيدية az-zaydiyya, adjective form Zaidi or Zaydi) is a Shi'a Muslim school of thought named after Zayd ibn ʻAlī, the grandson of Husayn ibn ʻAlī. Followers of the Zaydi Islamic jurisprudence are called Zaydi Shi'a and are particularly prevalent in Yemen.
The Zaydi Shi'a have a unique approach within Shi'a Islamic thought.
Its adherents are also known as Fivers.
__________________________________________________________________________________
/ "Beyond The Euphrates" / and / "Beyond the Jordan" /
|
_____________of_____________
|
/ Zer / Eli-e-zer / Arel-i / Ele-az-ar / Azar /
|
/ Asa-rel / Az-arel / Ar-iel / Ash-arel-ah /
|
/ Asiel / Asriel / Uz-z-iel /Azriel / Aziel /
|
/ Azriel-ites / Isra-eli-tes / Asrielites /
of
/ Ishma-eli-tes /
of
/ S-urel-i / Asa-rel / Az-arel / Ar-iel / Ash-arel-ah / of / Arel-i /
of
/ Shur / of / Hur / of / Ur /
of
/ Har- / Her- / Ach-Hir-am / Hor- / Hur- /
|
/ Called By Their Name /
of
/ The Levant /
|
_______________of_______________
|
/ Ottoman /
|
/ Ben-Jamin-nite /
|
/ Elders / Merchants / Princes /
|
/ Ramathite / are / H-ama-thites / of / Canaan /
|
/ A Goat is a Ram / is / Alemann-ic / of / Arama-ic / and / Arab-ic /
of
/ Ham- Ar-ama-ic -Gibeon /
of
/ Ptole-maic / Ar-abi-c / Alemanna-ic / Ara-maic / of / Put /
of
/ Gershonites / of / Ge-rmany / Y-Eye-I / Ger-Mani-ic / of / Gomer /
|
/ Eloim, Eloim / of / Ahlai / of / Gibeath-elohim /
of
/ Eli / Eloi / Eli /
of
/ House of Eli /
|
/ Ahimelech / Ahi- / Ahi-tub / Tub- / -al / Tubal-Cain / Tu-bal / Abi-tub / Abi- / Abi-melech /
|
/ Sir / -are- / Lords / Rulers / Daites / and / Knights /
|
/ Lyre / Y Eye I / L-ir-e / 's ? /
|
/ Assyria / Y-Eye-I / Assir /
|
/ Arab-ic /
______________________________________________________________________
/ House of Saud /
The kingdom was annexed in 1925 by the neighbouring Sultanate of Nejd under a resurgent House of Saud, and merged into the Kingdom of Nejd and Hejaz, which would eventually be known as Saudi Arabia in 1932.[1][2] The Kingdom of Nejd and Hejaz could pursue its expansionist policy by British arms supplies because of its close relations with the United Kingdom. Under Ibn Saud, the Hejaz withdrew from the League of Nations. In 1926, the Kingdom of Nejd and Hejaz was recognised by the United Soviet Socialist Republics, followed by the United States of America in 1931. By 1932, the United Kingdom, the USSR, Turkey, theImperial State of Iran and The Netherlands maintained legations in Jeddah; The French Third Republic, the Kingdom of Italy and the Kingdom of Egypt maintained unofficial consular representatives. __________________________
Yemen and Palestinian are behind The Arab Spring of / Al-ger-eri-a / Turnus / Jarha / SS / of / Put-iel / The Arab Spring (Arabic: الربيع العربي, ar-rabīˁ al-ˁarabī) was the revolutionary wave of demonstrationsand protests (both non-violent and violent), riots, and civil wars in the Arab world that began on 18 December 2010. By December 2013, rulers had been forced from power in Tunisia,[1] Egypt (twice),[2] Libya,[3] andYemen;[4] civil uprisings had erupted in Bahrain[5] and Syria;[6] major protests had broken out inAlgeria,[7] Iraq,[8] Jordan,[9] Kuwait,[10] Morocco,[11] and Sudan;[12] and minor protests had occurred in Mauritania,[13] Oman,[14] Saudi Arabia,[15] Djibouti,[16] Western Sahara,[17] and the Palestinian territories. _______________________ Against Israeli and | / Palestinian-/ North Arabiah /-Supporters / / Medina / The Arab Kingdom of Syria (Arabic: المملكة العربية السورية, al-Mamlakah al-Sūriyya al-‘Arabīyah), was the first modern Arab state to come into existence, but only lasted a little over four months (8 March–24 July 1920). During its brief existence, the kingdom was led by Sharif Hussein bin Ali’s son Faisal bin Hussein. Despite its claims to territory of a Greater Syria, Faisal's government controlled a limited area and was dependent on Britain which, along with France, generally opposed the idea of a Greater Syria and refused to recognize Faisal as its king.[1]
The kingdom surrendered to French forces on 24 July 1920. The Arab Revolt and the McMahon-Hussein Correspondence are crucial factors in the foundations of the Arab Kingdom of Syria. In the McMahon-Hussein Correspondence the promises of an Arab Kingdom were made by the British in return for an Arab uprising against the Ottomans.
[2]:209-215 As the promises of independence were being made by the British, separate agreements were being made including theSykes-Picot Agreement with the French. Ultimately, the implementation of the Sykes-Picot Agreement would lead to the undermining and destruction of the Arab Kingdom of Syria. Despite the significance of the Arab Revolt to modern Arab countries formed in its wake, at the time there was significant distrust and even opposition to the idea of an Arab Kingdom or series of Arab Kingdoms. This is due in part to the heavy influence of the French and the British in compelling the revolt and establishment of what is considered to be by modern standards puppet states.[3]:185-191 Critics claim that this involvement of foreign powers in handing out large sums of money and military support to establish an empire that would be led by imperial aspirants, rather than legitimate Arab nationalists, is the primary cause for the lack of duration of the majority of the early Hashemite Kingdoms (Kingdom of Hejaz and Kingdom of Iraq). Critics go on further to claim it was anathema to many Arabs that the family of theSharif of Mecca, the Hashemites, could wrest control from the Ottoman Sultan, with whom their loyalty had rested for centuries.[3]:187 _____________________________ / Maccah / Southern Arab Now Yemen / Hashemites / of Jordan / Bozrah / / Ayyah / Aliyath / Today Hashemites have spread in many places where Muslims have ruled, namely Iran, Afghanistan, Lebanon, Iraq, Jordan, Qatar, Palestine, Syria, Egypt, Somalia, Yemen, Djibouti, United Arab Emirates, Ethiopia, Northern Sudan, and Turkey. Some Hashemites in these countries carry the title Sayyid. Many members of the Banu Hashim have spread out across the world but so far there has been no attempt to register them all under one record. The Royal family of Morocco also claims ancestry from Ali (Alī ibn Abī Ṭālib) but they do not use Hashemite as their dynastic name. The Awan tribe of Pakistan also trace their ancestry from Ali.[5] _________________ / Caleb / | / Avvim / of / Hashemites / of / India / Awans are descendants of the fourth Caliph, Ali and as such, a number adopt the title,Alvi.[1] The Alavi or Alvi family can be found in the Middle East, North Africa, Central Asia, North America, and South Asia. Alavis are scattered in Pakistani cities of Khushab, Chakwal, Mianwali, Rawalpindi, and Attock and also in Bahawalnagar and Gilgit-Baltistan in addition to Northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh with main concentrations in Kakori near Lucknow and around 10 families of alavi's are present in HASWA in FATEHPUR district _______________
/ Dinah / Muhammad Ali Jinnah[a] ( Audio (help·info), born Mahomedali Jinnahbhai; 25 December 1876 – 11 September 1948) was a lawyer, politician, and the founder of Pakistan.[1] Jinnah served as leader of the All-India Muslim League from 1913 until Pakistan's independence on 14 August 1947, and as Pakistan's firstGovernor-General from independence until his death. He is revered in Pakistan as Quaid-i-Azam[b] (Great Leader) and Baba-i-Qaum[c] (Father of the Nation). His birthday is observed as a national holiday.[2][3]Dina Wadia (born Dina Jinnah August 15, 1919) is the daughter of Quaid e Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the Founder of Pakistan. Dina was born in London shortly after midnight on the morning of August 15, 1919. Dina was raised as a Muslim. She is the daughter of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, and Maryam Jinnah and the niece of Fatima Jinnah and Shireen Jinnah. |
/ Ye- / eme- / me- / en- /
| / Shemeber King of Zeboiim / | / En-shemesh / Emek-keziz / | / Shemer / Shemed / | / Alemeth / Temeni / | / Meshullemeth / Demetrius / _________________________________ | | Yemen
The Arab Liberation Flag served as the inspiration for the flags of both North and South Yemen prior to unification, and the current flags of Egypt, Iraq, Sudan, and Syria. It was one of the few openly-Communist regimes to exist in the Arab World and the Middle East. It united with the Yemen Arab Republic (commonly known as "North Yemen") on May 22, 1990, to form the present-day Yemen. After four years, however, South Yemen declared its secession from the north, which resulted in the north occupying south Yemen and the 1994 civil war.Currently: Pan-Arabism, Democratic socialism Formerly: Communism Marxism–LeninismPolitical positionLeft-wing International affiliation Progressive Alliance Socialist International ________________
/ Pan-Islamist / / Pan-theon / | / Ummah / Ummah (Arabic: أمة) is an Arabic word meaning "nation" or "community". It is distinguished from Sha'b (Arabic: شعب) which means a nation with common ancestry or geography. Thus, it can be said to be a supra-national community with a common history. It is a synonym for ummat al-Islamiyah (Arabic: الأمة الإسلامية) (the Islamic Nation), and it is commonly used to mean the collective community of Islamic peoples. In the Quran the ummah typically refers to a single group that shares common religious beliefs, specifically those that are the objects of a divine plan of salvation.[1][2] In the context of Pan-Islamism and politics, the word Ummah can be used to mean the concept of a Commonwealth of the Believers (أمة المؤمنين ummat al-mu'minīn). ________________ / South Yemen / ________________
/ North Yemen / ________|_________
/ Mulberry / / Merib / Ad-Dam / Merib-baal / The national emblem of Yemen depicts a golden eagle with a scroll between its claws. On the scroll is written the name of the country in Arabic: الجمهورية اليمنية or Al-Jumhuriyyah Al-Yamaniyah ("The Yemeni Republic"). The chest of the eagle contains a shield that depicts a coffee plant and the Marib Dam, with four blue and three wavy stripes below. The flagstaffs on the right and left of the eagle hold the Flag of Yemen. The Yemen Arab Republic (YAR; in Arabic: الجمهوريّة العربية اليمنية al-Jamhūrīyah al-`Arabīyah al-Yamanīyah), also known as North Yemen or Yemen (Sana'a), was a country from 1962 to 1990 in the northwestern part of what is now Yemen.[1] Its capital was at Sana'a. It united with the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen, commonly known as South Yemen, on May 22, 1990, to form the current Republic of Yemen.
__________________________ / Azal / Uzal / Gazelle / Sana'a is one of the oldest populated places in the world. According to popular legend, it was founded by Shem, the son of Noah.[3][4] It was known as "Azal" in ancient times, which has been connected to Uzal, a son of Qahtan, a great-grandson of Shem, in the biblical accounts of Genesis _______________ / Sabeans / Citadel / The Arab historian al-Hamdani wrote that Sana'a was walled by the Sabeans under their ruler Sha'r Awtar, who also built the Ghumdan Palace in the city. Because of its location, Sana'a has served as an urban center for the surrounding tribes of the region and as a nucleus of regional trade in southern Arabia. It was positioned at the crossroad of two major ancient trade routes linking Marib in the east to the Red Sea in the west.[4] _______________________ And Israeli Supporters ________________________ / Aramaic / Alexandria / / Ga- / ama- / al- / / Na- / ass-ir / ss- / se- / er- / / Hu- / us- / Hussein / S-ei-r / President Gamal Abdel Nasser Gamal Abdel Nasser was born on 15 January 1918 in Bakos, Alexandria, the first son of Fahima and Abdel Nasser Hussein. Gamal Abdel Nasser Hussein (Arabic: جمال عبد الناصر حسين, IPA: [ɡæˈmæːl ʕæbdenˈnɑːsˤeɾ ħeˈseːn]; 15 January 1918 – 28 September 1970) was the second President of Egypt, serving from 1956 until his death. He planned the 1952 overthrow of the monarchy, and was deputy prime minister in the new government. In 1953, Nasser introduced far-reaching land reforms. Following a 1954 Muslim Brotherhood-led attempt on his life, he ordered a crackdown on the organization, put President Muhammad Naguib under house arrest, and assumed executive office. A June 1956 public referendum approved both the new constitution and Nasser's nomination for presidency. In 1962, Nasser began a series of major socialist measures and modernization reforms in Egypt. Despite setbacks to his pan-Arabist cause, by 1963 Nasser's supporters gained power in several Arab countries. He also became embroiled in the North Yemen Civil War. Nasser introduced a new constitution in 1964, the same year he became president of the international Non-Aligned Movement, which he co-founded. He began his second presidential term in March 1965 after his political opponents were legally forbidden from running. Following Egypt's concessions to Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War, Nasser resigned only to retake office after popular demonstrations called for his reinstatement. Between the 1967 defeat and 1968, Nasser appointed himself prime minister, launched a war to regain lost territory, began a process of depoliticizing the military, and issued a set of political liberalization reforms. After the conclusion of the 1970 Arab League summit, Nasser suffered a heart attack and died. His funeral inCairo drew five million mourners and an outpouring of grief across the Arab world. Nasser remains an iconic figure and symbol of Arab dignity in the present day, particularly for his strides towards social justice and Arab unity, modernization policies, and anti-imperialist efforts. His presidency also encouraged and coincided with an Egyptian cultural boom, particularly in the arts. Nasser's detractors criticize his authoritarianism, his government's human rights violations, his populist relationship with the citizenry, and his failure to establish civil institutions, blaming his legacy for future dictatorial governance in Egypt. Historians describe Nasser as one of the towering political figures of the Middle East in the 20th century. ______________________________ Alliance with Jordan Hashemites / of Yemen / Now / Maccah / The 1970 Arab League summit was held on September 27 in Cairo, Egypt as an extraordinary Arab League Summit. The summit came in the aftermath of the bloody events of Black September in Jordan, and the clashes between the Palestinian Liberation Organization and King Hussein of Jordan. Egyptian president Gamal Abdul Nasser succeeded in getting both King Hussein of Jordan and Yasser Arafat, the chairman of the PLO, to end the bloody battle between Jordanians and Palestinians. The summit concluded its work on September 28, hours before Nasser died. The summit was boycotted by Iraq, Syria, Algeria and Morocco. |
____|__________________________________________|_____
/ Mardon / Britannia / Turkey /
|
/ Tyre / Y Eye I / Tiras /
|
/ House of Saud /
/ Mardon / Britannia / Turkey /
|
/ Tyre / Y Eye I / Tiras /
|
/ House of Saud /
____________________
/ Britain / of / Germain / of / Tarshish / Spain / of / Rushash / Ukraine / Rosh / of / Bahrain /
|
All
/ Syrians from Kir ? /
|
/ Set up in Secret /
|
/ West- / Philistines / Phoenicians / Syrians / -East /
|
/ Tyre / Y Eye I / Tiras /
|
/ Sidonians /
|
/ Box / of / Certain- Men War of Beth-Shemesh / of / Gehazi / of / Areli / of / Felix /
|
/ Seba of Cush /
|
/ Aztec -Incah--Micah /
of
/ The Other Mary ? /
The Sykes–Picot Agreement, officially known as the Asia Minor Agreement, was a secret agreement between the governments of the United Kingdom and France,[1] with the assent of Russia, defining their proposed spheres of influence and control in the Middle East should the Triple Entente succeed in defeating the Ottoman Empire during World War I. The negotiation of the treaty occurred between November 1915 and March 1916.[2] The agreement was concluded on 16 May 1916.[3]
The agreement effectively divided the Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire outside the Arabian peninsula into areas of future British and French control or influence.[4] The terms were negotiated by the French diplomat François Georges-Picot and British Sir Mark Sykes. The Russian Tsarist government was a minor party to the Sykes–Picot agreement, and when, following the Russian Revolution of October 1917, the Bolsheviks exposed the agreement, 'the British were embarrassed, the Arabs dismayed and the Turks delighted.'[5]
Territorial allocations
______________________
/ Haifa /
/ Hu- / us- / Hussein / S-ei-r /
[edit]Britain was allocated control of areas roughly comprising the coastal strip between the sea and River Jordan, Jordan, southern Iraq, and a small area including the ports of Haifa and Acre, to allow access to the Mediterranean.[6] France was allocated control of south-eastern Turkey, northern Iraq, Syria and Lebanon.[citation needed] Russia was to get Istanbul, the Turkish Straits and the Ottoman Armenian vilayets.[6] The controlling powers were left free to decide on state boundaries within these areas.[6] Further negotiation was expected to determine international administration pending consultations with Russia and other powers,
including the Sharif of Mecca.[6]
/ Britain / of / Germain / of / Tarshish / Spain / of / Rushash / Ukraine / Rosh / of / Bahrain /
|
All
/ Syrians from Kir ? /
|
/ Set up in Secret /
|
/ West- / Philistines / Phoenicians / Syrians / -East /
|
/ Tyre / Y Eye I / Tiras /
|
/ Sidonians /
|
/ Box / of / Certain- Men War of Beth-Shemesh / of / Gehazi / of / Areli / of / Felix /
|
/ Seba of Cush /
|
/ Aztec -Incah--Micah /
of
/ The Other Mary ? /
The Sykes–Picot Agreement, officially known as the Asia Minor Agreement, was a secret agreement between the governments of the United Kingdom and France,[1] with the assent of Russia, defining their proposed spheres of influence and control in the Middle East should the Triple Entente succeed in defeating the Ottoman Empire during World War I. The negotiation of the treaty occurred between November 1915 and March 1916.[2] The agreement was concluded on 16 May 1916.[3]
The agreement effectively divided the Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire outside the Arabian peninsula into areas of future British and French control or influence.[4] The terms were negotiated by the French diplomat François Georges-Picot and British Sir Mark Sykes. The Russian Tsarist government was a minor party to the Sykes–Picot agreement, and when, following the Russian Revolution of October 1917, the Bolsheviks exposed the agreement, 'the British were embarrassed, the Arabs dismayed and the Turks delighted.'[5]
Territorial allocations
______________________
/ Haifa /
/ Hu- / us- / Hussein / S-ei-r /
[edit]Britain was allocated control of areas roughly comprising the coastal strip between the sea and River Jordan, Jordan, southern Iraq, and a small area including the ports of Haifa and Acre, to allow access to the Mediterranean.[6] France was allocated control of south-eastern Turkey, northern Iraq, Syria and Lebanon.[citation needed] Russia was to get Istanbul, the Turkish Straits and the Ottoman Armenian vilayets.[6] The controlling powers were left free to decide on state boundaries within these areas.[6] Further negotiation was expected to determine international administration pending consultations with Russia and other powers,
including the Sharif of Mecca.[6]
_______________________
/ Arabah /
Hashemite (also spelled Hashimite), is the English-language version of the Arabic: هاشمي, transliteration: Hāšimī, and traditionally refers to those belonging to the Banu Hashim, or "clan of Hashim", an Arabian clan within the larger Quraysh tribe. It also refers to an Arab dynasty whose original strength stemmed from the network of tribal alliances and blood loyalties in the Hejaz region of Arabia, along the Red Sea.
Banū Hāshim (Arabic: بنو هاشم) was a clan in the Quraysh tribe. Muhammad, was a member of this clan; his great-grandfather was Hashim, for whom the clan is named. Members of this clan are referred to by the Anglicised version of their name as Hashemites, Hussaini or Hasani. Descendants of Muhammad usually carry the titles Sayyid, Syed or Sharif or are the Ashraf clan.
_________________________
/ Maccah /
/ Hu- / us- / Hussein / S-ei-r /
From the 10th century onwards, the sharif (religious leader) of Mecca and its Emir was, by traditional agreement, a Hashemite. Before World War I,
Hussein bin Ali of the Hashemite Dhawu-'Awn clan ruled the Hejaz on behalf of the Ottoman sultan. For some time it had been the practice of
the Sublime Porte to appoint the Emir of Mecca from among a select group of candidates. In 1908, Hussein bin Ali was appointed to the Emirate of Mecca. He found himself increasingly at odds with the Young Turks in control at Istanbul, while he strove to secure his family's position as hereditary Emirs.
/ Arabah /
Hashemite (also spelled Hashimite), is the English-language version of the Arabic: هاشمي, transliteration: Hāšimī, and traditionally refers to those belonging to the Banu Hashim, or "clan of Hashim", an Arabian clan within the larger Quraysh tribe. It also refers to an Arab dynasty whose original strength stemmed from the network of tribal alliances and blood loyalties in the Hejaz region of Arabia, along the Red Sea.
Banū Hāshim (Arabic: بنو هاشم) was a clan in the Quraysh tribe. Muhammad, was a member of this clan; his great-grandfather was Hashim, for whom the clan is named. Members of this clan are referred to by the Anglicised version of their name as Hashemites, Hussaini or Hasani. Descendants of Muhammad usually carry the titles Sayyid, Syed or Sharif or are the Ashraf clan.
_________________________
/ Maccah /
/ Hu- / us- / Hussein / S-ei-r /
From the 10th century onwards, the sharif (religious leader) of Mecca and its Emir was, by traditional agreement, a Hashemite. Before World War I,
Hussein bin Ali of the Hashemite Dhawu-'Awn clan ruled the Hejaz on behalf of the Ottoman sultan. For some time it had been the practice of
the Sublime Porte to appoint the Emir of Mecca from among a select group of candidates. In 1908, Hussein bin Ali was appointed to the Emirate of Mecca. He found himself increasingly at odds with the Young Turks in control at Istanbul, while he strove to secure his family's position as hereditary Emirs.
_______________________
Sharif Hussein bin Ali
/ Sha- / har- / ri- / -if / bi- / -in / Ali- /
Sharif Hussein bin Ali rebelled against the rule of the Ottomans during the Arab Revolt of 1916.[4] Between 1917 and 1924, after the collapse of Ottoman power, Hussein bin Ali ruled an independent Hejaz, of which he proclaimed himself king, with the tacit support of the British Foreign Office. His supporters are sometimes referred to as "Sharifians" or the "Sharifian party". His chief rival in the Arabian Peninsula was the king of the Najd (highlands) named Ibn Saud, who annexed the Hejaz in 1925 and set his own son, Faysal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, as governor. The region was later incorporated into Saudi Arabia.
The Sharif was charged with protecting the cities and their environs and ensuring the safety of pilgrims performing the Hajj. The title is sometimes spelled Sheriff or Sherif, with the latter variant used, for example, by T. E. Lawrence in Seven Pillars of Wisdom.
The common-law political and legal office of sheriff found in some anglophone countries is unrelated.
_________________
/ Cushan-Rishathaim /
|
/ Assir / Medin / Bani /
The office of the Sharifate of Mecca dates back to the late Abbasid era. Since 1201, the Sharifate was held by a member of the Hawashim clan[citation needed], not to be confused with the larger clan of Banu Hashim to which all Sharifs claim descent. Descendants of this family continued to hold the position until the Twentieth Century on behalf of various Muslim powers including the Ayyubids and the Mamelukes. In 1517, the Sharif acknowledged the supremacy of the Ottoman Caliph, but maintained a great degree of local autonomy. During the Ottoman era, the Sharifate expanded its authority northwards to include Medina, and southwards to the frontiers of 'Asir, and regularly raided Nejd.
Sharif Hussein bin Ali
/ Sha- / har- / ri- / -if / bi- / -in / Ali- /
Sharif Hussein bin Ali rebelled against the rule of the Ottomans during the Arab Revolt of 1916.[4] Between 1917 and 1924, after the collapse of Ottoman power, Hussein bin Ali ruled an independent Hejaz, of which he proclaimed himself king, with the tacit support of the British Foreign Office. His supporters are sometimes referred to as "Sharifians" or the "Sharifian party". His chief rival in the Arabian Peninsula was the king of the Najd (highlands) named Ibn Saud, who annexed the Hejaz in 1925 and set his own son, Faysal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, as governor. The region was later incorporated into Saudi Arabia.
The Sharif was charged with protecting the cities and their environs and ensuring the safety of pilgrims performing the Hajj. The title is sometimes spelled Sheriff or Sherif, with the latter variant used, for example, by T. E. Lawrence in Seven Pillars of Wisdom.
The common-law political and legal office of sheriff found in some anglophone countries is unrelated.
_________________
/ Cushan-Rishathaim /
|
/ Assir / Medin / Bani /
The office of the Sharifate of Mecca dates back to the late Abbasid era. Since 1201, the Sharifate was held by a member of the Hawashim clan[citation needed], not to be confused with the larger clan of Banu Hashim to which all Sharifs claim descent. Descendants of this family continued to hold the position until the Twentieth Century on behalf of various Muslim powers including the Ayyubids and the Mamelukes. In 1517, the Sharif acknowledged the supremacy of the Ottoman Caliph, but maintained a great degree of local autonomy. During the Ottoman era, the Sharifate expanded its authority northwards to include Medina, and southwards to the frontiers of 'Asir, and regularly raided Nejd.
_________________________________
/ The House of Eli /
|
/ Greek / Mysia / Men of / Athens / of / Kurd-ish /
|
/ Balak son of Zippor / of / Jethro / of / Halak / of / Meroz / of / Ram 's / of / Ur /
|
/ Kar-tah / Ker-ioth / Kir- / Kor-ah / Kurd-ish /
|
/ Cretans / of / Manaen / from Kartah / of Adinah from Cush of Thebes / of / Shinar / of / Elam /
|
/ Arpachshad / took / Râsû’ĕjâ / daughter of / Sûsân / daughter of Elam, /
|
/ Ram 's / Balkans Region- Illyricum /
|
/ Ahlai / of / Jarha / of / Zochar /
|
/ The Cure /-Is-/ The Truth /
|
/ Prophecy /
|
/ Alpha / of / Jesus / of / Omega /
_________________________
/ Box / of / Certain- Men War of Beth-Shemesh / of / Gehazi / of / Areli / of / Felix /
|
/ Aramean / Ur /
The Kurdish people, or Kurds (Kurdish: کورد, Kurd), are an ethnic group in Western Asia, mostly inhabiting a region known as Kurdistan, which includes adjacent parts of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey.
_____________________________
/ House of Eli /
|
/ Korah's Rebellion / Moab Rebelled (Kir-hareseth) / Rebellion of Sheba /
|
/ Pashhur / of / Shahar / of / Mesha king of Moab / of / Sephar / of / Joktan /
|
/ Balak son of Zippor Kings of Moab / of / Zipporah / of / Jethro /
|
/ The Princes / of / Hero's of Moab / of / Buk-ki the son of Jogli /
|
/ Ptolema-ic / of / Publius / of / Syracuse,/ Sicily / of / Silesia / of / Cilicia / of / Seleu-cia /
|
/ The Princes of Zadok -the priest / of Nobles who Arrived in Geneva of Munich are Eunuchs /
|
/ Ron / of / Sharon / of / Aaron / of / Shimron / of / Ekron / of / Beth-Horon / of / Choran /
|
/ Hasmon-ean / Ha-shem / of / Hasham/Chusham/Hushim / of the Zerahites /
|
/ The Hararite / The Sham / Artist / Artisans / Tanner / of / Hashem / of / Sanballat / of / Ararat /
|
/ Ha-shem / the Gizonite / Shemer / Geshem the Arab /
|
/ Geshurites and Maacathites /
|
/ Zech-ariah / and / Haggai /
|
/ The / Has-mone-an / Scribes / of / Menahem / of / Mahanaim / of / Maacah /
|
/ Carites of Tanner of Carchemish of Kartah of / Bahrain / of Kernainia of Thebes / of / Bela /
|
/ Pashhur / of / Shahar / of / Mesha king of Moab / of / Sephar / of / Joktan /
|
/ Their Elders /--/ Hid Themselves /--/ Head and Tail /
|
/ Abianus King Chittim / of / Cushan-Rishathaim / of / Kikianus King of Cush /
|
/ Abianus / King Chittim / Lysanias- Tetrarch of Abilene, / of / Kikianus King of Cush /
|
/ Publius / of / Syracuse,/ Sicily / of / Silesia / of / Cilicia /
|
/ Ben-Jamin-nite /
|
/ Persians / of / Shechem son of Hamor son of / Chiddekim / son of Pered / of / Peru /
|
/ Par-thians / Par-aguay / of / Per-u-ez / of / Pir-ai-tes / of / Por-or-tu-gal / of / Pur-Ur-Persia /
|
/ Pirates of the Caribean /
|
/ Aztec -Incah--Micah /
|
/ The Bankers are Bakers-bread-Money / of / Leaven / of / Pharisees /
|
/ West Bank /
|
/ Mob-lord-Cartel-Nob /
|
_____________of_____________
|
/ Chaldean / Aramean / Judeans / Haes-mone-an / Sabeans /
|
/ Cretans / of / Manaen / of / Manoah / of / Maon / Of / Koz /
|
/ Has-monean / of / Ha-shem / of / Ha-shum / of / Manean /
|
/ Hasmon-ean / of / Oak - on the Hill of Moreh / of / Mamre / of / Pashhur / Ha-shem /
|
/ Tabor / of / Hasham/Chusham/Hushim / of the Zerahites / of / Bashan /
|
/ Marauding -Band /
|
/ Turnus / Egypt / Syria / Mesopotamia / Hazer-hatticon /
The Ayyubid dynasty (Kurdish: دەوڵەتی ئەییووبی Dewleta Eyûbiyan; Arabic: الأيوبيون al-ʾAyyūbiyyūn) was a Muslim dynasty of Kurdish origin,[3][4][5] founded by Saladin and centered in Egypt. The dynasty ruled much of the Middle East during the 12th and 13th centuries CE. Saladin had been the vizier of Fatimid Egypt before he brought an end to Fatimid rule in 1171. In 1174, he proclaimed himself Sultan following the death of the Ayyubids' former master, Zengid sultan Nur al-Din.[6] The Ayyubids spent the next decade launching conquests throughout the region and by 1183, the territories under their control included Egypt,Syria, northern Mesopotamia, Hejaz, Yemen, and the North African coast up to the borders of modern-dayTunisia. Most of the Kingdom of Jerusalem fell to Saladin after his victory at the Battle of Hattin in 1187. However, the Crusaders regained control of Palestine's coastline in the 1190s.
_________________
/ Balkans / Aramean / Bani /
The most enduring Mamluk realm was the military caste in medieval Egypt that rose from the ranks of slave soldiers who were mainly of Turkic origin
Cumans-Kipchaks,[1] Circassian[2] and Georgian[3][4][5] origin, although in the Burji (post-1389) Mamluk sultanate many Mamluks could also be of Balkan origin (Albanian, Greek, South Slavic).[6][7]
/ The House of Eli /
|
/ Greek / Mysia / Men of / Athens / of / Kurd-ish /
|
/ Balak son of Zippor / of / Jethro / of / Halak / of / Meroz / of / Ram 's / of / Ur /
|
/ Kar-tah / Ker-ioth / Kir- / Kor-ah / Kurd-ish /
|
/ Cretans / of / Manaen / from Kartah / of Adinah from Cush of Thebes / of / Shinar / of / Elam /
|
/ Arpachshad / took / Râsû’ĕjâ / daughter of / Sûsân / daughter of Elam, /
|
/ Ram 's / Balkans Region- Illyricum /
|
/ Ahlai / of / Jarha / of / Zochar /
|
/ The Cure /-Is-/ The Truth /
|
/ Prophecy /
|
/ Alpha / of / Jesus / of / Omega /
_________________________
/ Box / of / Certain- Men War of Beth-Shemesh / of / Gehazi / of / Areli / of / Felix /
|
/ Aramean / Ur /
The Kurdish people, or Kurds (Kurdish: کورد, Kurd), are an ethnic group in Western Asia, mostly inhabiting a region known as Kurdistan, which includes adjacent parts of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey.
_____________________________
/ House of Eli /
|
/ Korah's Rebellion / Moab Rebelled (Kir-hareseth) / Rebellion of Sheba /
|
/ Pashhur / of / Shahar / of / Mesha king of Moab / of / Sephar / of / Joktan /
|
/ Balak son of Zippor Kings of Moab / of / Zipporah / of / Jethro /
|
/ The Princes / of / Hero's of Moab / of / Buk-ki the son of Jogli /
|
/ Ptolema-ic / of / Publius / of / Syracuse,/ Sicily / of / Silesia / of / Cilicia / of / Seleu-cia /
|
/ The Princes of Zadok -the priest / of Nobles who Arrived in Geneva of Munich are Eunuchs /
|
/ Ron / of / Sharon / of / Aaron / of / Shimron / of / Ekron / of / Beth-Horon / of / Choran /
|
/ Hasmon-ean / Ha-shem / of / Hasham/Chusham/Hushim / of the Zerahites /
|
/ The Hararite / The Sham / Artist / Artisans / Tanner / of / Hashem / of / Sanballat / of / Ararat /
|
/ Ha-shem / the Gizonite / Shemer / Geshem the Arab /
|
/ Geshurites and Maacathites /
|
/ Zech-ariah / and / Haggai /
|
/ The / Has-mone-an / Scribes / of / Menahem / of / Mahanaim / of / Maacah /
|
/ Carites of Tanner of Carchemish of Kartah of / Bahrain / of Kernainia of Thebes / of / Bela /
|
/ Pashhur / of / Shahar / of / Mesha king of Moab / of / Sephar / of / Joktan /
|
/ Their Elders /--/ Hid Themselves /--/ Head and Tail /
|
/ Abianus King Chittim / of / Cushan-Rishathaim / of / Kikianus King of Cush /
|
/ Abianus / King Chittim / Lysanias- Tetrarch of Abilene, / of / Kikianus King of Cush /
|
/ Publius / of / Syracuse,/ Sicily / of / Silesia / of / Cilicia /
|
/ Ben-Jamin-nite /
|
/ Persians / of / Shechem son of Hamor son of / Chiddekim / son of Pered / of / Peru /
|
/ Par-thians / Par-aguay / of / Per-u-ez / of / Pir-ai-tes / of / Por-or-tu-gal / of / Pur-Ur-Persia /
|
/ Pirates of the Caribean /
|
/ Aztec -Incah--Micah /
|
/ The Bankers are Bakers-bread-Money / of / Leaven / of / Pharisees /
|
/ West Bank /
|
/ Mob-lord-Cartel-Nob /
|
_____________of_____________
|
/ Chaldean / Aramean / Judeans / Haes-mone-an / Sabeans /
|
/ Cretans / of / Manaen / of / Manoah / of / Maon / Of / Koz /
|
/ Has-monean / of / Ha-shem / of / Ha-shum / of / Manean /
|
/ Hasmon-ean / of / Oak - on the Hill of Moreh / of / Mamre / of / Pashhur / Ha-shem /
|
/ Tabor / of / Hasham/Chusham/Hushim / of the Zerahites / of / Bashan /
|
/ Marauding -Band /
|
/ Turnus / Egypt / Syria / Mesopotamia / Hazer-hatticon /
The Ayyubid dynasty (Kurdish: دەوڵەتی ئەییووبی Dewleta Eyûbiyan; Arabic: الأيوبيون al-ʾAyyūbiyyūn) was a Muslim dynasty of Kurdish origin,[3][4][5] founded by Saladin and centered in Egypt. The dynasty ruled much of the Middle East during the 12th and 13th centuries CE. Saladin had been the vizier of Fatimid Egypt before he brought an end to Fatimid rule in 1171. In 1174, he proclaimed himself Sultan following the death of the Ayyubids' former master, Zengid sultan Nur al-Din.[6] The Ayyubids spent the next decade launching conquests throughout the region and by 1183, the territories under their control included Egypt,Syria, northern Mesopotamia, Hejaz, Yemen, and the North African coast up to the borders of modern-dayTunisia. Most of the Kingdom of Jerusalem fell to Saladin after his victory at the Battle of Hattin in 1187. However, the Crusaders regained control of Palestine's coastline in the 1190s.
_________________
/ Balkans / Aramean / Bani /
The most enduring Mamluk realm was the military caste in medieval Egypt that rose from the ranks of slave soldiers who were mainly of Turkic origin
Cumans-Kipchaks,[1] Circassian[2] and Georgian[3][4][5] origin, although in the Burji (post-1389) Mamluk sultanate many Mamluks could also be of Balkan origin (Albanian, Greek, South Slavic).[6][7]
________________
/ Cal- / ali- / -iph / --- / Sha- / har- / -iah /
The Caliph (Arabic: خليفة ḫalīfah/khalīfah) is the head of state in a Caliphate, and the title for the ruler of the IslamicUmmah,
an Islamic community ruled by the Shari'ah.
Ali bin Hussein , (Arabic: علي بن الحسين) GBE (1879–1935) was King of Hejaz and Grand Sharif of Mecca from October 1924 until December 1925. He was the eldest son of Sharif Hussein bin Ali, the first modern King of Hejaz, and a scion of the Hashemite family. With the passing of the kingship from his father he also became the heir to the title of Caliph, but he did not adopt the khalifal office and style.
/ Cal- / ali- / -iph / --- / Sha- / har- / -iah /
The Caliph (Arabic: خليفة ḫalīfah/khalīfah) is the head of state in a Caliphate, and the title for the ruler of the IslamicUmmah,
an Islamic community ruled by the Shari'ah.
Ali bin Hussein , (Arabic: علي بن الحسين) GBE (1879–1935) was King of Hejaz and Grand Sharif of Mecca from October 1924 until December 1925. He was the eldest son of Sharif Hussein bin Ali, the first modern King of Hejaz, and a scion of the Hashemite family. With the passing of the kingship from his father he also became the heir to the title of Caliph, but he did not adopt the khalifal office and style.
______________
/ Seba / Saba / Sabteca / Amaw /
Aden (UK /ˈeɪdən/ ay-duhn, US /ˈɑːdɛn/ ah-den; Arabic: عدن ʻAdin/ʻAdan Yemeni pronunciation: [ˈʕæden, ˈʕædæn]) is a seaport city in Yemen, located by the eastern approach to the Red Sea (the Gulf of Aden), some 110 miles (170 kilometres) east of Bab-el-Mandeb. Its population is approximately a million people. Aden's ancient, natural harbour lies in the crater of a dormant volcano which now forms a peninsula, joined to the mainland by a low isthmus.
This harbour, Front Bay, was first used by the ancient Kingdom of Awsan between the 5th and 7th centuries BC.
The modern harbour is on the other side of the peninsula.
______________________
/ Hod- / ei- / -ida /
Until Aden and Hodeida eclipsed it in the 19th century, Mocha was the principal port for Yemen's capital Sana'a.
/ Seba / Saba / Sabteca / Amaw /
Aden (UK /ˈeɪdən/ ay-duhn, US /ˈɑːdɛn/ ah-den; Arabic: عدن ʻAdin/ʻAdan Yemeni pronunciation: [ˈʕæden, ˈʕædæn]) is a seaport city in Yemen, located by the eastern approach to the Red Sea (the Gulf of Aden), some 110 miles (170 kilometres) east of Bab-el-Mandeb. Its population is approximately a million people. Aden's ancient, natural harbour lies in the crater of a dormant volcano which now forms a peninsula, joined to the mainland by a low isthmus.
This harbour, Front Bay, was first used by the ancient Kingdom of Awsan between the 5th and 7th centuries BC.
The modern harbour is on the other side of the peninsula.
______________________
/ Hod- / ei- / -ida /
Until Aden and Hodeida eclipsed it in the 19th century, Mocha was the principal port for Yemen's capital Sana'a.
________________
/ Sal-adin /
|
/ Ummah /
_________|__________
/ Adin -People Who Sealed the Covenant /
|
/ Shibah / Adan / Adin / India /
The Qu'aitis, sons of Umar bin Awadh al Qu'aiti, who became a jemadar in the forces of the Nizam of Hyderabad State (now in India), first took the town of Shibam from the rival Kathiris in 1858. They later conquered Ash Shihr in 1866 and Al Mukalla in 1881, largely replacing the Kathiris to control most of theHadhramaut coast on the Gulf of Aden. They entered into treaty relations with the British in 1888 and created a unified sultanate in 1902 that would become a part of the Aden Protectorate.
__________________
/ Ur / Babylon /
Ali bin Hussein died in Baghdad, Iraq in 1935. He had four daughters and one son, 'Abd al-Ilah, who went on to become the Regent of the
Kingdom of Iraq during the minority of King Faisal II.
/ Sal-adin /
|
/ Ummah /
_________|__________
/ Adin -People Who Sealed the Covenant /
|
/ Shibah / Adan / Adin / India /
The Qu'aitis, sons of Umar bin Awadh al Qu'aiti, who became a jemadar in the forces of the Nizam of Hyderabad State (now in India), first took the town of Shibam from the rival Kathiris in 1858. They later conquered Ash Shihr in 1866 and Al Mukalla in 1881, largely replacing the Kathiris to control most of theHadhramaut coast on the Gulf of Aden. They entered into treaty relations with the British in 1888 and created a unified sultanate in 1902 that would become a part of the Aden Protectorate.
__________________
/ Ur / Babylon /
Ali bin Hussein died in Baghdad, Iraq in 1935. He had four daughters and one son, 'Abd al-Ilah, who went on to become the Regent of the
Kingdom of Iraq during the minority of King Faisal II.
_____________________________
/ Hasham / Hushim / Hushah /
_________________________________________________
/ Ha- / Hash-em / -ash / She-chem a prince / Ha-shem /
|
/ Menachem /
|
/ Gi-zonites / Gi-beon / -Iz-har / Hazazon-Tamar / -Onites /
/ Hasham / Hushim / Hushah /
_________________________________________________
/ Ha- / Hash-em / -ash / She-chem a prince / Ha-shem /
|
/ Menachem /
|
/ Gi-zonites / Gi-beon / -Iz-har / Hazazon-Tamar / -Onites /
___________________
David's Mighty Men
Hashem the Gi-zonites, Jonathan the son of Shagee the Hararite,
__________________________________________________
- 1 Chronicles 11:34
Hashem the Gizonite, Jonathan the son of Shagee the Hararite,
1 Chronicles 11:33-35 (in Context) 1 Chronicles 11 (Whole Chapter) Other Translations
_____________________________________________________________________
/ Raise a Signal Make a SignPost / Blow and Sound the Alarm / and the Trumpets /
|
/ Oppose / and / Expose /
|
/ Japheth-/ Beth / of / Both of Them / of / Baal /-Shem /
|
/ Their Elders /--Hanan--/ Head and Tail /
|
/ Consp-ic-uous- / CIA / --/ Chi-/-iz-zi-/-ina /-- / Micah /-Cons-ola-tion /
|
/ Micah Had a Shrine / at / Carmel / of / Tibreu / of / Abdon the son of Achiram the Gomerite /
|
/ Hellenist of Alexandria /
|
/ Called By Their Name /
|
/ The House of Eli /
of
/ The Levant /
of
/ Hasmon-ean / Ha-shem / of / Hasham/Chus-ham/Hushim / of the Zerahites /
|
/ Mt. Halak /-Is-/ Mt. Meron /
of
/ The Kenites / of / The Oak of Moreh / of Elon /
of
/ Palti the son of Laish who was of Gallim / the city Dan / of Bashan /
of
/ Hazor -/ Beth-Rehob /- Golan /
|
/ Pantheon / Eunuchs / of Babylon / of Thebes /
|
/ Tanners / of / Ararat /
|
/ Who Captured the Ark ? /
|
/ Walked / Backwards /
|
/ Naked /
__________________________
/ "You Must Be Born Again" /
|
/ Exile Because of Idolatry /
|
/ Micah and The Levite / Micah and the Carved Image / A Levite and His Concubine /
|
/ Micah Had a Shrine / at / Carmel / of / Tibreu / of / Abdon the son of Achiram the Gomerite /
|
/ EU-ropes /
|
/ Head Covering /
|
/ The Poles / and / The Ropes / of the Ark of / Polish Politics / of / Potiphar /
/ Raise a Signal Make a SignPost / Blow and Sound the Alarm / and the Trumpets /
|
/ Oppose / and / Expose /
|
/ Japheth-/ Beth / of / Both of Them / of / Baal /-Shem /
|
/ Their Elders /--Hanan--/ Head and Tail /
|
/ Consp-ic-uous- / CIA / --/ Chi-/-iz-zi-/-ina /-- / Micah /-Cons-ola-tion /
|
/ Micah Had a Shrine / at / Carmel / of / Tibreu / of / Abdon the son of Achiram the Gomerite /
|
/ Hellenist of Alexandria /
|
/ Called By Their Name /
|
/ The House of Eli /
of
/ The Levant /
of
/ Hasmon-ean / Ha-shem / of / Hasham/Chus-ham/Hushim / of the Zerahites /
|
/ Mt. Halak /-Is-/ Mt. Meron /
of
/ The Kenites / of / The Oak of Moreh / of Elon /
of
/ Palti the son of Laish who was of Gallim / the city Dan / of Bashan /
of
/ Hazor -/ Beth-Rehob /- Golan /
|
/ Pantheon / Eunuchs / of Babylon / of Thebes /
|
/ Tanners / of / Ararat /
|
/ Who Captured the Ark ? /
|
/ Walked / Backwards /
|
/ Naked /
__________________________
/ "You Must Be Born Again" /
|
/ Exile Because of Idolatry /
|
/ Micah and The Levite / Micah and the Carved Image / A Levite and His Concubine /
|
/ Micah Had a Shrine / at / Carmel / of / Tibreu / of / Abdon the son of Achiram the Gomerite /
|
/ EU-ropes /
|
/ Head Covering /
|
/ The Poles / and / The Ropes / of the Ark of / Polish Politics / of / Potiphar /