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Munro-Hay and Muslim
An early Muslim tradition is that the Negus Ashama ibn Abjar offered asylum to a group of Muslims fleeing persecution during Muhammad's life ( 615 ), but Stuart Munro-Hay believes that Axum had been abandoned as the capital by then – although Kobishchanov states that Ethiopian raiders plagued the Red Sea, preying on Arabian ports at least as late as 702.

Munro-Hay and /
Eon was the first king of Axum to use the mysterious title + BAC + CIN + BAX + ABA, which Munro-Hay reports has been interpreted to mean Basileus habasinon -- " King of the Habashat / Habash ", a title used in South Arabian inscriptions to refer to the Axumite kings.

Munro-Hay and who
Stuart Munro-Hay, who proposes a 518 date for the rise of Dhu Nuwas, dates this event to 525, while by the later chronology ( in which Dhu Nuwas comes to power in 523 ), this event would have happened about 530, although a date as late as 543 has been postulated by Jacques Ryckmans.
Munro-Hay also suggests that Sembrouthes may have been the ruler who erected the anonymous Monumentum Adulitanum, an inscription at Adulis that Cosmas Indicopleustes made a copy of for king Kaleb of Axum .< sup > 3 </ sup >
Eon may be the same person as the King Hiuna, who is mentioned in the Book of the Himyarites as leading a military expedition from Aksum across the Red Sea into South Arabia ; Munro-Hay notes that the " difference in spelling is no more than would result from transposing the name into the two languages concerned "; but he admits that the identification is not conclusive, or whether Hiuna was even a king.
Munro-Hay reports a theory that Nezool and Nezana were actually the names of a pair of kings who shared in a dual reign.
Because the gold coins issued with this king's name closely resemble those of King Kaleb, Munro-Hay suggests that Ousas may be another name of Tazena, who is described both in Ethiopian tradition and on Kaleb's coins as his father.
Without any clear discussion, Munro-Hay identifies him with a king Alla Amidas, who is also known only through the coins he issued.

Munro-Hay and before
Ezana was the first monarch of Axum to embrace Christianity, and the first after Zoskales to be mentioned by contemporary historians, a situation that led S. C. Munro-Hay to comment that he was " the most famous of the Aksumite kings before Kaleb.

Munro-Hay and kingdom
In either case, no gold coins of Armah have been found, and Munro-Hay speculates that " he had accepted that there was no purpose in producing them, as his kingdom was by now at least in part cut off from the Byzantine trade network.

Munro-Hay and was
Munro-Hay notes, " The ' rooms ' with stone piers have no doorways, and the piers presumably supported floors, but occasional divisions on the same level do have doorways, implying that not all the lower level was merely a podium for a higher floor level.
Munro-Hay opines that by this expedition Axum overextended itself, and this final intervention across the Red Sea, " was Aksum's swan-song as a great power in the region.
Munro-Hay notes that the legend upon his bronze coins, bzmsql tmw (" By this cross you will conquer "), was a loose translation of the famous motto of Emperor Constantine the Great, In hoc signo vinces (" By this sign you will conquer ").
S. C. Munro-Hay suggests that this particular stela was the last one erected, and that " possibly they went out of favor as Christianity spread, bringing with it new ideas about burial.
Due to die-links between the coins of Alla Amidas and Kaleb, Munro-Hay suggests that the two kings were co-rulers, Alla Amidas possibly ruling the African territories while Kaleb was across the Red Sea campaigning in South Arabia.
Skeptical that this Israel was actually the son of King Kaleb, Munro-Hay suggests that Israel may have been better than the other kings between him and Kaleb ( or Gabra Masqal ), and tradition compressed the succession.

Munro-Hay and .
* Grierson, Roderick & Munro-Hay, Stuart, The Ark of the Covenant.
* Munro-Hay, Stuart., The Quest For The Ark of The Covenant: The True History of The Tablets of Moses.
* Stuart Munro-Hay.
* Stuart Munro-Hay.
Some modern historians like Stuart Munro-Hay, Rodolfo Fattovich, Ayele Bekerie, Cain Felder, and Ephraim Isaac consider this civilization to be indigenous, although Sabaean-influenced due to the latter's dominance of the Red Sea, while others like Joseph Michels, Henri de Contenson, Tekle-Tsadik Mekouria, and Stanley Burstein have viewed Dʿmt as the result of a mixture of Sabaeans and indigenous peoples.
* Munro-Hay, Stuart Aksum.
* Stuart Munro-Hay ( 2005 ), The Quest for the Ark of the Covenant, Ch.
A surviving letter from the Arian Roman Emperor Constantius II is addressed to ' Ezana and his brother Se ' azana, and requests that Frumentius be sent to Alexandria to be examined for doctrinal errors ; Munro-Hay assumes that ' Ezana either refused or ignored this request.
However, Stuart Munro-Hay describes it as " the sort of dwelling that a prosperous Aksumite, perhaps a noble or high official of the fourth to sixth centuries AD, might have constructed for himself.
* Stuart Munro-Hay.
Munro-Hay dates his death to some time after 553 based on the inscription at Murayghän.
* Stuart Munro-Hay.
* Stuart Munro-Hay.
S. C. Munro-Hay believes that it is " very likely " that Ousanas is the king to whom Aedesius and Frumentius were brought.
S. C. Munro-Hay places his reign in a gap between ` DBH and DTWNS, or c. 250 .< sup > 1 </ sup > However, W. R. O.

cites and Muslim
Here, Brubaker cites " transethnic and transborder linguistic categories ... such as Francophone, Anglophone and Lusophone ' communities '", along with Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Confucian, Huguenot, Muslim and Catholic ' diasporas '.
He cites the endorsement of pluralism to explain why violent forms of anti-Semitism generated in medieval and modern Europe, culminating in the Holocaust, never occurred in regions under Muslim rule.
He cites Hassan al-Banna and Muslim Brotherhood as his source for inspiration.
He cites al-Hajj Osmanu Eshaka Boyo of Kintampo as an “ alim with a wide range of Muslim connexions and an excellent grasp of local Islamic history ” whose efforts brought together a great many Arabic manuscripts from around Ghana.
He cites this as the reason for what he claims to be lack of support from the more moderate Islamic community for anti-terrorism measures and for what he claims to be their failure to openly or widely criticise Muslim extremists.
He also cites attempts by Islamist sympathizers to whitewash history books concerning Muslim conquest in the Indian subcontinent as another example of India's " secularism ".

cites and historian
Dionysius of Halicarnassus ( 1. 72. 5 ) cites Xenagoras, the second century BC historian, as claiming that Odysseus and Circe had three sons: Romus, Anteias, and Ardeias, who respectively founded three cities called by their names: Rome, Antium, and Ardea.
1st or 2nd century historian Cassius Dio cites the brothers Raos and Raptos as the leaders of the Astings.
Czech cultural historian and ethnographer Čeněk Zíbrt, who wrote in detail about the origin of the dance, in his book, Jak se kdy v Čechách tancovalo cites an opinion of František Doucha ( 1840, Květy, p. 400 ) that " polka " was supposed to mean " tanec na polo " ( n. b. the absence of diacritics ), i. e., " a dance in half ", both referring to the half-tempo 2 / 4 and the half-jump step of the dance.
Islamic historian Bernard Lewis cites the roll of honor at Alamut containing the names of fifty well-performed assassinations of known political enemies during the thirty-five years reign of Hassan.
" However, the profound fascist / anti-fascist schism of the period described by Hobsbawm was real enough, as Yale historian Timothy Snyder notes: Nevertheless, Snyder also claimed that " The Spanish Civil War revealed that Stalin was determined, despite the Popular Front rhetoric of pluralism, to eliminate opposition to his version of socialism ", and that his determination was knowable and known even contemporaneously ( Snyder cites George Orwell's analysis of, and dismay at, communist actions in Spain ).
The early English historian Bede cites Vergetius in his prose Life of St Cuthbert.
Architectural historian Scott Meacham cites both Berzelius buildings in his study of Yale and Dartmouth society and fraternity architecture.
According to the 4th century historian Rufinus ( x. 9 ), who cites Frumentius ' brother Edesius as his authority, as children ( ca.
According to such estimates ( Jaimoukha cites the earlier historian A. Rogov ), there were as many as 1. 5 million Chechens in the North Caucasus in 1847 ( and probably many more before that, as there had already been much fighting and destruction by that point ), but by 1861 there were only 140000 remaining in the Caucasus.
" Later accounts embellished on details ; historian Richard Ketchum notes that the color of her hair has been described as everything from black to blonde to red ; he also cites an 1840s examination of an alleged lock of her hair that described it as " reddish ".
Israeli historian Zeev Sternhell cites boulangisme as a major influence on Fascism, alongside Anarcho-syndicalism and the Cercle Proudhon.
Polish historian Władysław Filar, who witnessed the massacres, cites numerous statements made by Ukrainian officers when reporting their actions to the leaders of UPA-OUN.
A prominent Bábí, and subsequently Bahá ' í, historian cites the wife of an officer who had the chance to know her that she was strangled by a drunken officer of the government with her own veil which she had chosen for her anticipated martyrdom.
His criticisms of Pericles and The Megarian Decree appear to be genuine but he seems to be satirizing the historian Herodotus when he blames the war on the kidnapping of three prostitutes ( Herodotus cites the kidnappings of Io, Europa, Medea and Helen as the cause of hostilities between Greeks and Asiatics ).
Windschuttle cites the words of the principal historian of the ‘ Stolen Generations ’, Peter Read: " Welfare officers, removing children solely because they were Aboriginal, intended and arranged that they should lose their Aboriginality, and that they never return home.
To illustrate this point, military historian James S. Corum cites an excerpt from a 1938 Condor Legion report on this use of this tactic:
Baseball historian Bill James, while ranking Kelly as the 65th greatest first baseman of all-time, also cites Kelly as " the worst player in the Hall of Fame ".
The Polish historian Andrzej Chwalba cites Germanization measures that included:
On the possible role of an early Kit-Cat grouping in furthering these goals through armed invasion by William of Orange and through the Glorious Revolution itself, Downes cites Whig historian John Oldmixon, who knew many of those involved, and who wrote in 1735 of how some club members " before the Revolution 1688 met frequently in the Evening at a Tavern, near Temple Bar, to unbend themselves after Business, and have a little free and cheerful Conversation in those dangerous Times ".
Observing that such a thing could never have happened in Europe, the British historian Paul Johnson cites this astounding feat as a dramatic example of American determination and ingenuity: based on the conviction that anything material is possible.
* Art historian Joachim Pissarro cites The Starry Night as an exemplar of the artist's fascination with the nocturnal.
Architectural historian Scott Meacham cites both of Book & Snake's buildings in his study of Yale and Dartmouth society and fraternity architecture.
Gay film historian Vito Russo cites the character Lindy, played by Antonio Fargas, as being both funny and challenging through his gay militancy.
However the famed nautical historian Howard I. Chapelle, cites the opinion of the late W. P. Stephens that in New York City there is a Whitehall Street and this was where the Whitehall was first built.

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