Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Annales Barenses is an anonymous set of annals written in the city of Bari in the late eleventh century. At the time of its composition, Bari was the chief city of the Byzantine Empire in southern Italy. [1] The Annales Barenses are closely related to the chronicle of Lupus Protospatharius and the Anonymi Barensis Chronicon.
1643 editio princeps of the chronicle. Anonymi Barensis Chronicon is a medieval Italian annalistic chronicle.. Composed in Latin by an anonymous author from Bari in the first quarter of the 12th century, it covers the years 855–1118, concentrating first and foremost on the events in Bari and Apulia.
Alfredo Giovine (2 April 1907 – 25 August 1995) was an Italian historian, folklorist, dialectologist, and journalist. He wrote several books and many monographs on the musicians and theatres of the Province of Bari and the surrounding Region of Puglia as well as on the dialect and folklore of Bari, his native city.
Kashf al-Bari Amma fi Sahih al-Bukhari (Arabic: كشف الباري عما في صحيح البخاري) is a 24-volume Arabic commentary on Sahih al-Bukhari, authored by Saleemullah Khan. [1] It originates from his lectures at Jamia Farooqia , and the compilation process commenced around 1986–1987, spanning approximately four hundred notebooks.
The five books in the original series were published in reading order, and although they’re marketed to middle-grade readers they can also be enjoyed by teens and adults.
Byzantius (died 1035) was the archbishop of Bari in the early eleventh century. He began the construction of the new cathedral , which was continued by his successors. In 1025, the Byzantine catepan of Italy , Basil Boioannes , reorganised the structure of the catepanate and, at the request of Byzantius, authorised the reattachment of Bari to ...
A List of Rebecca Yarros’s Books In Order Courtesy Entangled: Red Tower Books "Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links."
By this time, the Bari people and land were already devastated. Bari folklore tells us of how long ago the land flanking the Nile was full of strings of villages spread out to the horizon, as far as the eye could see. Baker concurs, in his book "Ismailia" (1874), [8] that this had been so when he first visited the area. However, he describes ...