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Conquest (also called Marie Walewska) is a 1937 American historical-drama film directed by Clarence Brown and starring Greta Garbo, Charles Boyer, Reginald Owen. It was produced and distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer .
Madhura Vijayam (lit. The conquest of Madhura ()) or Vira Kamparaya Charitham (lit.The history of the brave king Kampa) is a mahākāvya (epic poem) in nine cantos (chapters), though possibly there was an extra canto (now lost) between the eighth and final canto.
The Thiruvalangadu plates, from the fourteenth year of Rajendra Chola I, mentions his conquest of Kadaram but does not go into the details. [6] The first attempt by someone from outside India to identify the places associated with the campaign was made by epigraphist E. Hultzsch , who had published the stele in 1891. [ 8 ]
Gunnar Garbo (1924–2016), Norwegian journalist and politician; Ingvald Garbo (1891–1941), member of the Norwegian Resistance in WWII; Norman Garbo (1919–2017), American author, lecturer and painter; Raffaellino del Garbo (1466), Florentine painter; Juan Pujol García (1912–1988), codename "Garbo", Spanish double agent for the British
After the conquest of Sindh, Qasim chose the Hanafi school of Islamic law which stated that, when under Muslim rule, people of Indic religions such as Hindus, Buddhists, and Jains are to be regarded as dhimmis (from the Arab term) as well as "People of the Book" and are required to pay jizya for religious freedom.
The reasons of this naval expedition are unclear, the historian Nilakanta Sastri suggested that the attack was probably caused by Srivijayan attempts to throw obstacles in the way of the Chola trade with the East (especially China), or more probably, a simple desire on the part of Rajendra to extend his digvijaya to the countries across the sea so well known to his subject at home, and ...
Ma'bar Sultanate (Persian: سلطنت مابار), also known as the Madurai Sultanate, was a short lived kingdom based in the city of Madurai in Tamil Nadu, India.It was dominated by Hindustani speaking Muslims. [1]
Lalitaditya alias Muktapida (IAST: Lalitāditya Muktāpīḍa; r. c. 724 CE–760 CE) was a Karkota monarch of the Kashmir region in the Indian subcontinent.The 12th-century Kashmiri chronicler Kalhana characterizes Lalitaditya as a "world conqueror", crediting him with miraculous powers and extensive conquests across India and Central Asia.