Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. Salibi al-Zahir (given name also spelled Sulaybi or Celebi) (died 1773) was the multazem of Tiberias in the mid-18th century, during the Ottoman rule. He was appointed to the post by his father, Zahir al-Umar, the virtually autonomous ruler of northern Palestine. He was Zahir's eldest son and generally known to be his most loyal son.

  2. Salibi al-Zahir (given name also spelled Sulaybi or Celebi) (died 1773) was the multazem (tax farmer) of Tiberias in the mid-18th century, during the Ottoman rule. He was appointed to the post by his father, Zahir al-Umar, the virtually autonomous ruler northern Palestine.

  3. Los tres hermanos apelaron entonces al hijo mayor y más leal de Zahir, Salibi, para que interviniera en su favor con Zahir, pero Salibi no pudo persuadir a Zahir de que hiciera concesiones. Los cuatro hermanos intentaron entonces reavivar su alianza con los Bani Saqr , que Zahir había derrotado desde entonces en la llanura de Marj Ibn Amer en ...

  4. Salibi al-Zahir (given name also spelled Sulaybi or Celebi) (died 1773) was the multazem (tax farmer) of Tiberias in the mid-18th century, during the Ottoman era. He was appointed to the post by his father, Zahir al-Umar, who ruled an autonomous entity in northern Palestine.[1] He was Zahir's...

  5. Salibi al-Zahir (-1773) | WikiTree FREE Family Tree. Born [date unknown] [location unknown] Ancestors. Son of Zahir al-Umar and [mother unknown] Brother of Uthman al-Zahir, Ali al-Zahir, Sa'id al-Zahir and Ahmad al-Zahir. [spouse (s) unknown] [children unknown] Died 1773 in Egypt Eyalet, Ottoman Empire.

  6. In the Battle of Lake Huleh on 2 September 1771, the rebel forces of Zahir al-Umar and Nasif al-Nassar routed the army of Uthman Pasha al-Kurji, the Ottoman governor of Damascus, at Lake Huleh in the eastern Galilee. Most of Uthman Pasha's 10,000-strong army drowned in the Jordan River as they attempted to flee Zahir's forces ...

  7. 8 de oct. de 2019 · First of all, walking towards the city center from the north, I reached a nice stone stairway. I walked up until I came to the ruins of a small fortress. It was built in 1745 by Salibi al-Zahir (d. 1773). He was the son of Daher al-Omar (1689-1775), the Bedouin ruler of the Galilee at the time