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Sheikh Mansur belonged to the Elistanzkhoy teip and was married to Chachi with whom he had three children at the time of his arrest - a son Yasa (8 years old), and two daughters Ragmet (4 years old) and Namet (a year old). [8] The descendants of Sheikh Mansur also took a Y-DNA test which showed a typical Elistanzkhoy Y-DNA result in L-M20. [9]
Al Shaab Hospital Khartoum 15°35′52″N 32°32′04″E / 15.597675565104202°N 32.534437922940576°E / 15.597675565104202; 32.534437922940576 ( Al Shaab
The Sheikh Mansur movement, [b] was a major war between the Russian Empire and the North Caucasians, caused by the Chechen religious and military leader Sheikh Mansur, who opposed the Russian expansionist policies and wanted to unite the North Caucasians under one, single, Islamic state.
The Sheikh Mansur Battalion as well as the Dzhokhar Dudayev Battalion held the defense near Kyiv and participated in partisan operations, ambushes, sabotage work and mining during the Battle of Kyiv. [4] [13] [14] They had previously fought in the Battle of Mariupol, but they left for Kyiv as they deemed it was more important to defend the ...
The Al-Nuri Hospital, which operated for some 700 years, was the same hospital where Al-Mansur Qalawun was treated and inspired to establish his own hospital in Cairo. The Al-Nuri Hospital, in addition to bringing about the Al-Mansuri hospital, was innovative in its practices as it became the first hospital to begin maintaining medical records ...
Other people called Mansur include, during the golden Age of Islam: Al-Mansur, second Abbasid caliph and the founder of Baghdad. Ismail al-Mansur, third ruler of the Fatimid dynasty ruled from 946 to 953. Mansur Al-Hallaj, Persian mystic, writer, and teacher of Sufism; Almanzor, 10th-century ruler of al-Andalus; Mansur ibn Ilyas, Timurid physician
The Chechen Republic of Ichkeria (/ ɪ tʃ ˈ k ɛr i ə / itch-KERR-ee-ə; Chechen: Нохчийн Республик Ичкери, romanized: Nóxçiyn Respublik Içkeri; Russian: Чеченская Республика Ичкерия, romanized: Chechenskaya Respublika Ichkeriya; abbreviated as "ChRI" or "CRI"), known simply as Ichkeria, and also known as Chechnya, is a former de facto ...
Abu Mansur al-Maturidi, who was a leading theologian and jurist of his time in Transoxiana (Ma Wara' al-Nahr) in Central Asia, was the founder of the Māturīdiyya theological school. This was one of the two principal Sunni schools of Islamic theology ( kalam ). [ 1 ]