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Omar Mukhtar and the Senussi movement
Published 1980-12-01“…The Senussi movement began with the beginning of stability and its founder, Muhammad bin Ali al-Senussi, who roamed large areas of the Arab world until he finally settled in Libya and was able to open the first corner in the history of the Senussi movement in 1843. …”
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L'Appel Senussi en Cyrénaïque 1837-1859, une étude comparative historique
Published 2016-08-01“… La recherche porte sur l'appel Senussi et les facteurs de son émergence en tant qu'appel islamique réformiste, étroitement liés à la vie de son fondateur, sa lignée, son niveau d'instruction et sa lutte pour établir l'appel, et la vie de ceux qui lui succéda dans sa direction, et les facteurs de son association avec la Cyrénaïque à l'exclusion des autres régions. …”
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The Senussi movement in Africa in the light of a secret British report issued in 1908 AD
Published 2016-12-01“… The research deals with an unpublished secret British report issued in 1908 AD on the history of the Senussi movement and its relations with local and international forces during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. …”
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THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT AND THE CASES OF MUAMMAR AL-GADDAFI, SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI AND ABDULLAH AL-SENUSSI
Published 2016-01-01“…From that moment on, the ICC analyzed the cases of Muammar Al-Gaddafi, Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi and Abdullah Al-Senussi, who were high authorities in the previous Libyan regime. …”
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Lost and potentially found: the location of the “Temple of Hermes” at ancient Bubastis in the Nile Delta
Published 2024-03-01Get full text
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The Sacred Waterscape of the Temple of Bastet at Ancient Bubastis, Nile Delta (Egypt)
Published 2021-09-01Get full text
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Best Practices for Point of Care Ultrasound: An Interdisciplinary Expert Consensus
Published 2024-04-01Get full text
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Sahara en mouvement
Published 2011-12-01“…Similarly, the rumors fueled by media about AQIM are not very different from those once spread about the Senussi brotherhood. In the same way, the political thinking of the Tuareg in Mali and Niger is not so far remote from the thinking of the Moorish scholars of the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries. …”
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