هجران تخل نشوز أو هجر فرار - traduction vers Anglais
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هجران تخل نشوز أو هجر فرار - traduction vers Anglais

SAUDI ARABIAN COMMANDER
Rahmah bin Jabir al-Jalahmah; Rahmah bin Jabir al-Jalahimah; رحمة بن جابر بن عذبي الجلهمي أو الجلاهمة; Rahmah ibn Jabr; Rahmah ibn Jabir al-Jalahimah; Rahmah ibn Jabir Al Jalhami

هجران تخل نشوز أو هجر فرار      

desertion

desertion         
  • A United States wartime poster deprecating absence
  • [[Armenia]]n soldiers in 1919, with deserters as prisoners
  • A 1918 cartoon by [[Cecil Hartt]] making light of the high incidence of soldiers going absent without leave in the  Australian Imperial Force
  • "Convoy of Deserters - Paris" in the book  "Cassell's History of the War between France and Germany. 1870-1871"
  • The execution of a U.S. deserter in the Federal Camp, Alexandria
  • ''Deserteur'' (Дезертир), by [[Ilya Repin]], 1917
ABANDONMENT OF MILITARY DUTY WITHOUT AUTHORIZATION
AWOL; Deserter; Absent without leave; Deserters; A.W.O.L.; Absent Without Leave; Unauthorized absence; Unauthorized Absence; Missing movement; Desertions; Awol; Absent Without (Official) Leave; Absent Without Official Leave; Absence without official leave; Absence without leave; Absence Without Official Leave; Desertrix; Deserting; Absence Without Leave; Military deserter; Desertion in Nazi Germany; Absent unknown; Failure to repair
هجر ، هجران تخل نشوز أو هجر فرار
هجر         
صفحة توضيح لويكيميديا
هجر
emigratory

Wikipédia

Rahmah ibn Jabir al-Jalhami

Rahmah ibn Jabir ibn Adhbi al-Jalhami (Arabic: رحمة بن جابر بن عذبي الجلهمي; c. 1760–1826) was an Arab ruler in the Persian Gulf region and was described by his contemporary, the English traveler and author, James Silk Buckingham, as 'the most successful and the most generally tolerated pirate, perhaps, that ever infested any sea.'

As a pirate, he had a reputation for being ruthless and fearless. He wore an eyepatch after losing an eye in battle, which makes him the earliest documented pirate to have worn an eyepatch. He was described by the British statesman Charles Belgrave as 'one of the most vivid characters the Persian Gulf has produced, a daring freebooter without fear or mercy' (ironically, his first name means 'mercy' in Arabic).

He began life as a horse dealer, and he used the money he saved to buy his first ship and with ten companions began a career of buccaneering. He was so successful that he soon acquired a new craft: a 300-ton boat, manned by 350 men. He would later have as many as 2000 followers, many of them black slaves. At one point his flagship was the 'Al-Manowar' (derived from English).