Ibn-Gevirol - translation to English
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Ibn-Gevirol - translation to English

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-Gevirol      
Ibn Gvirol (poeta e filosofo medievale di lingua ebraica)
Solomon Ibn Gabirol         
  • ''Mivhar ha-Peninim'', traditionally thought to have been written by Solomon ibn Gabirol,<ref name=stanford/> 1899 edition with corrected text and a facing English translation.<ref name=hb37435/>
11TH-CENTURY ANDALUSIAN POET AND JEWISH PHILOSOPHER
Avicebron; Ibn Gabirol; Solomon ben Yehuda Ibn Gabirol; Avencebron; Avicebrol; Avecebrol; Ibn Gabirol, Solomon ben Yehuda; Solomon ben Judah Ibn Gabirol; Even Gvirol; Ibn Gvirol; Gabirol; Solomon Ibn Gabirol; Solomon Gabirol; Solomon ben Gabirol; Shlomo Ibn Gabirol; Solomon ben Judah ibn Gabirol; Abu Ayyub Sulaiman ibn Yahya ibn Jabirul; Sulaymān ibn Jabīrūl; Salamo bin Jehuda bin Gabirol; Salamo Ben Jehuda Ben Gebirol; Shlomo ben Yehudah; Salómon Ibn Gabirol; Shlomo ben Gabirol; Ibn-Gabirol; Fons Vitæ
Solomon Ibn Gabirol (1020-1057), filosofo e poeta ebreo spagnolo
Omar I         
  • Rock inscription, thought to be an autograph of Umar's signature
  • Tārīkhunā bi-uslūb qaṣaṣī}} ('Our History in a Narrative style'), a popular history book first published in Iraq in 1935.</ref>
  • Tombstone of caliph Umar, in the [[Green Dome]] in [[al-Masjid al-Nabawi]], Medina. The first window from the right gives a view of Umar's grave.
2ND RASHIDUN CALIPH FROM 634 TO 644
Umar al-Khattab; Caliph Omar; Omar bin al-Khattab; Omar I; 'Umar ibn-al-Khattab; 'Umar ibn al-Khattab; Umar ibn Al-Khattab; Umar I; Omer Bin Khattab; Omar bin Khattab; Umar Farooq; Omar Bin Alkahttab; Umar ibn al-Khattāb; Omar Ibn El Khattab; Umar bin-l-Kahttab; Calif Omar; Umar al Shaykh; Omar Ibn Al-Khattab; Omar Farooq; Umar ibn Khattab; `Umar ibn al-Khattāb; Umar Ibn al-Khattab; Umar ibn al-Khattab; Hazrat Umar; Khalif Umar Al-Khattab; Omar ibn al-Khattāb; عمر بن الخطاب; Umar bin Al-Khattab; Hazarath Omar; Omār; Umar bin al-Khattab; Omar ibn al-Khattab; `Umar ibn al-Khattab; Umar bin Khattab; Omar Bin Al-Khattab; Umar Farooq (RA); Omar khattab; Umar Ibn Al-Khattab; ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab; Umar b. al-Khattab; Caliph Umar; `Umar; Caliph 'Umar; Umar Son of Al-Khittab; Farooq the Great; Caliph 'Umar I; Omar ibn Al-Khattab; Omar ibn Al Khattwaab; Umar bin al-Khat'tab; Umar ibn al-Khat'tab; Umar Son of Al-Khattab; Omar Ibn Alkhattab; Khalif Omar; Omar Ibn al-Hattab; ʿUmar; Omar Ibn Al Khattab; Umar ibn ul Khattab; Umar al Khattab; Omar Bin Al-khattab; Umer Ibn. Khattab; Omar; ʿUmar ibn al-Khaṭṭāb; Umar ibn al-Khaṭṭāb; Abd al-Rahman ibn Umar; Abu Shahma; ʿOmar
Omar I (il secondo califfo musulmano)

Definition

Battuta
·noun The measuring of time by beating.

Wikipedia

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).