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  2. Tale of Two Brothers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tale_of_Two_Brothers

    The "Tale of Two Brothers" is an ancient Egyptian story that dates from the reign of Seti II, who ruled from 1200 to 1194 BC during the 19th Dynasty of the New Kingdom. [1] The story is preserved on the Papyrus D'Orbiney, [ 2 ] which is currently held in the British Museum.

  3. Bhai Mati Das - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhai_Mati_Das

    The two brothers accompanied Guru Teg Bahadur during his two-year stay at Assam. [9] Guru Tegh Bahadur then bought a hillock near the village of Makhowal five miles north of Kiratpur and established a new town, Chakk Nanaki [ 10 ] now named Anandpur Sahib (the abode of bliss) where Bhai Mati Das and Bhai Sati Das also resided.

  4. Sayyid brothers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sayyid_brothers

    The Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb leads his final expedition (1705).. The two brothers, who now come into such prominence came from the old military aristocracy. Besides the prestige of the Syed lineage and the personal renown acquired by their own valor, they were the sons of Abdullah Khan Barha [9] who was chosen by Aurangzeb as the first Subedar of Bijapur in the Deccan and then Subedar of Ajmer.

  5. The Two Brothers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Two_Brothers

    The Two Brothers is a German fairy tale collected by the Brothers Grimm, tale number 60. It is Aarne-Thompson type 303, "The Blood Brothers", with an initial episode of type 567, "The Magic Bird Heart". A similar story, of Sicilian origin, was also collected by author and folklorist Andrew Lang in The Pink Fairy Book. [1]

  6. The Golden Cage (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Golden_Cage_(book)

    The book tells the story of three brothers whose lives were heavily influenced by Iranian history: the oldest, Abbas, was a soldier under the Shah; the second, Javad, was a communist activist; the younger, Ali, supported Khomeini's Islamic revolution. [3]

  7. Subh-i-Azal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subh-i-Azal

    The two brothers separated households, and the Bābīs in Iraq and Iran split into three factions: Azalīs, Bahāʼīs, or undecided. In February–March 1867, all three factions gathered in Baghdad for debates, and soon the undecided mostly joined the Bahāʼīs, who were already in the majority. [ 36 ]

  8. Núrayn-i-Nayyirayn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Núrayn-i-Nayyirayn

    The two brothers were tortured, and promised release upon recanting their faith and cursing its leaders, which they never did. The collaborators wrote a letter to the Shah in Tehran , informing him that they had "in their concern for the security of the sovereign", detained and imprisoned two Baháʼís, and requested his permission to have ...

  9. al-Khansa' - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Khansa'

    In pre-Islamic society, the role of a female poet, such as al-Khansā’, was to compose elegies for the tribesmen who fell in the battlefield. Her extraordinary fame rests mainly on her elegiac poetry composed for her two brothers, Sakhr and Mu‘āwiya, who were killed in tribal skirmishes of Banū Sulaym with Banū Murra and Banū Asad ...