Ibn-Gevirol - definition. What is Ibn-Gevirol
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%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

THOROUGHFARE IN TEL AVIV, ISRAEL
Ibn Gevirol Street; Ibn Gvirol Street
  • Ibn Gabirol Street
  • A monument at the site of the [[Yitzhak Rabin]] assassination, located on the street

Ibn Gabirol Street         
Ibn Gabirol Street () (colloquially Ibn Gvirol or Even Gvirol) is a major street in Tel Aviv, Israel.
Battuta         
  • A view of an island in the [[Maldives]].
  • Turkestan]], [[Kazakhstan]].
  • [[Azalai]] salt caravan from [[Agadez]] to [[Bilma]], [[Niger]]
  • Ibn Battuta in 1334 visited the [[shrine of Baba Farid]] in [[Pakpattan]].<ref name=":0" />
  • Tomb of Feroze Shah Tughluq, successor of [[Muhammad bin Tughluq]] in Delhi. Ibn Battuta served as a ''[[qadi]]'' or judge for six years during Muhammad bin Tughluq's reign.
  • Flag of the [[Golden Horde]] during the reign of [[Öz Beg Khan]]
  • coral stones]], is the largest Mosque of its kind.
  • Historic copy of selected parts of the Travel Report by Ibn Battuta, 1836 CE, Cairo
  • ''Borj en-Nâam'' barracks in [[Tangier]], repurposed as Ibn Battuta Memorial Museum
  • Purported Mausoleum of Ibn Battuta in [[Tangier]]
  • Old City of Sana'a]], Yemen
  • [[Sankore Madrasah]] in [[Timbuktu]], [[Mali]]
  • Ibn Battuta provides the earliest mention of the [[Great Wall of China]] with regard to medieval geographic studies, although he did not see it.
  • Ottoman]] 17th century tile depicting the [[Kaaba]], in [[Mecca]]
  • Ibn Battuta visited the [[Emirate of Granada]], which was the final vestige of the [[Arab-Andalusian]] populace in [[Al-Andalus]].
  • Maqamat of Al-Hariri]] showing a group of pilgrims on a ''[[hajj]]''.
  • The port and waterfront of [[Zeila]]
  • Ibn Battuta may have met [[Andronikos III Palaiologos]] in late 1332.
14TH CENTURY MUSLIM MAGHREBI SCHOLAR AND EXPLORER
Ibn Batuta; Abu Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Battuta; Ibn Batutta; Battuta; Ibn Battutah; Ibn battuta; Ibn Batutah; Ibn Batuda; Ibn Battūtah; Ibnu Batutah; Ibn Battoutah; Ibn Battouta; Travelling route of Ibn Battuta; Travelling route of Ibn Batuta; Ibn Batouta; Rihla of Ibn Battuta; Ibn-Batuta; Baṭṭūṭa Ibn; Muhammad bin 'Abdullah Ibn Batuta; The Travels of Ibn Battuta; Ibn Baṭṭūṭa; Ibn Battúta; Ibn Baṭūṭah
·noun The measuring of time by beating.
Ibn Jubayr         
  • caravan]] routes that allowed travel to distant lands.
  • Islamic]] [[dome]]s, built in [[Palermo]], [[Sicily]], by the Normans.<ref>''Les Normands en Sicile'', p. 54.</ref>
  •  Map of the first journey by Ibn Jubair from [[Ceuta]] to [[Makkah]]
ARAB TRAVELLER AND GEOGRAPHER
Ibn Jubair; Al Husain Mahommed ibn Alimad ibn Jubair; Ibn Jabayr; Muhammad ibn Ahmad Ibn Jubayr; Jubair al Hakim; Jubair al-Hakim
Ibn Jubayr (1 September 1145 – 29 November 1217; Full name: Abū l-Husayn Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn Jubayr al-Kenani (), also called simply Jabair.), also written Ibn Jubair, Ibn Jobair, and Ibn Djubayr, was an Arab geographer, traveller and poet from al-Andalus.

ويكيبيديا

Ibn Gabirol Street

Ibn Gabirol Street (Hebrew: רְחוֹב אִבְּן גַבִּירוֹל) (colloquially Ibn Gvirol or Even Gvirol) is a major street in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Ibn Gabirol Street is named after the medieval Hebrew poet and philosopher Solomon ibn Gabirol. It carries traffic north and south, and is a busy residential and shopping street. It intersects Marmorek, Laskov, Carlebach and fellow medieval Spaniard Yehuda HaLevi streets on the south, and runs northbound along Rabin Square and Yarkon Park to Shmuel Yosef Agnon Street in the north. The street is also home to Tel Aviv City Hall.

Ibn Gabirol Street is a commercial thoroughfare with special appeal to chocolate lovers. Two chocolatiers make fresh chocolates on the premises and three shops import Belgian chocolates which are flown into Israel every two weeks under carefully controlled conditions.

The unpaved road which was to become Ibn Gabirol Street had already existed in early 20th century, connecting Jaffa with the village of Al-Mas'udiyya, also known as Summeil. The village, located at the eastern end of Arlosoroff Street, became depopulated on 25 December 1947, when the 1947–1948 civil war in Mandatory Palestine broke out. Since then and until 12 September 1962, the village houses had been used by Jewish squatters, mainly new olim. In 1962, what had remained of the village was demolished in order to widen Arlosoroff and Ibn Gabirol streets.

The road to Summeil was the eastern boundary of the Geddes Plan for Tel Aviv, and nowadays Ibn Gabirol Street forms the eastern boundary of the White City (Tel Aviv).