كان موضع فخر ل - significado y definición. Qué es كان موضع فخر ل
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Qué (quién) es كان موضع فخر ل - definición

TWELFTH LETTER OF MANY SEMITIC ALPHABETS
Lamed; ל; לּ; Lām; ﻝ; ﻟ; ﻠ; ﻞ; ܠ; Lamadh; Lamad; Lam (letter); Lamedh (letter); ل; ﻟ ﻝ; ࠋ; 𐤋; 𐡋; Lamd (letter); ﬥ
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  • An iron cow-goad in the [[Israel Museum]] (lower right, 9th-7th century BC)
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List of largest metropolitan areas of the Middle East         
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WIKIMEDIA LIST ARTICLE
List of metropolitan areas in the Middle East; Largest metropolitan areas of Western Asia; Largest metropolitan areas of the Near East; Largest metropolitan areas of the Middle East
This is a list of metropolitan areas in Middle East, with their population according to different sources. The list includes metropolitan areas that have a population of over 1.
Lamed         
·Impf & ·p.p. of Lame.
Fakhr al-Din II         
  • nahiyas}} of [[Byblos]], [[Batroun]], [[Bsharri]] (''pictured in 2016'') and [[Dinniyeh]] in northern Mount Lebanon from [[Yusuf Sayfa]].
  • Shaqif Arnun]] (''pictured in 2005'') was a stronghold of Fakhr al-Din, guarding his domains from the south.
  • The port town of [[Sidon]] (''pictured in 1843''), capital of the [[Sidon-Beirut Sanjak]], which Fakhr al-Din and his family governed between 1593 and 1633 with occasional interruption
  • saray]]}} in [[Deir al-Qamar]] (''pictured in 2005''), seat of the Ma'n under Fakhr al-Din
  • 1630}}
  • An engraving by [[Olfert Dapper]] from 1677 depicting Fakhr al-Din's capture of Mustafa Pasha, beylerbey of Damascus, at the [[Battle of Anjar]] in 1623. Fakhr al-Din is shown as the standing, turbaned figure pointing toward Mustafa Pasha, who is being held to the ground.
  • A statue of Fakhr al-Din in the [[Druze]] town of [[Baaqlin]] in the Chouf
  • A modern, artistic representation of Fakhr al-Din in the [[Beiteddine Palace]].
  • A 1961 Lebanese stamp portraying Fakhr al-Din (right) and [[Bashir Shihab II]] (left) in commemoration of Lebanon's independence in 1946. Fakhr al-Din is considered by the Lebanese as the founder of the country.
  • An engraving of Fakhr al-Din, published in a 1646 work by his physician in 1632–1633, the [[Nazareth]]-based [[Franciscan]] Eugène Roger. The portrait was probably not drawn from life, but rather depicted what the illustrator thought a Middle Eastern figure would look like.
  • Fakhr al-Din lived in exile in different parts of Italy in 1613–1618, including about two years in [[Florence]] (''pictured in the early 18th century'').
  • [[Subayba]] (''pictured in 2009''), built on the [[Mount Hermon]] range, was one of Fakhr al-Din's most important fortresses.
  • The mountains of the [[Chouf]] (''pictured in 2019''), the traditional territory of Fakhr al-Din's family, the [[Ma'n dynasty]]
  • Maronite]] support for Fakhr al-Din.
  • mulberry]] leaves in Mount Lebanon (''pictured in 1922''). Fakhr al-Din promoted and protected the region's burgeoning [[silk]] industry.
  • A fanciful 18th-century representation of a wife of Fakhr al-Din
LEBANESE PRINCE
Fahk-al-Din II; Fakhreddin II; Fakhr ad-Din II; Fakr ed-Din Maan II; Fahkr-al-Din II; Fakhr ad Din II; Ali Fakhr-al-Din II; Fakhr-al-Din II; Fakhreddine II; Fakhreddin Maan; Fakhereddin; Fakhr al-Din ibn Qurqumaz Ma'n; Fakhr al-Dīn ibn Qurqumaz Maʿn; فخر الدين بن قرقماز معن; Fakhr al-Dīn al-Thānī; فخر الدين الثاني; Fakhr al-Din Ma'n; Fakhr al-Din Maan; Fakhr al-Din Ma'an
, published in Tuscany in 1787. According to the art historian Hafez Chehab, "it is generally believed" that the engraving was a copy of a painted portrait of Fakhr al-Din originally in the possession of Ferdinand II, Grand Duke of Tuscany.

Wikipedia

Lamedh

Lamedh or Lamed is the twelfth letter of the Semitic abjads, including Hebrew Lāmed ל, Aramaic Lāmadh , Syriac Lāmaḏ ܠ, Arabic Lām ل, and Phoenician Lāmed . Its sound value is [l].

The Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek Lambda (Λ), Latin L, and Cyrillic El (Л).