Search references for BOHTAN. Phrases containing BOHTAN
See searches and references containing BOHTAN!BOHTAN
Kurdish principality in the Ottoman Empire
Bohtan was a medieval Kurdish principality in the Ottoman Empire centered on the town of Jazirah ibn 'Omar in northern Mesopotamia (or northern Jazira)
Bohtan
Varieties of the Aramaic language
cultural issues related to their language. Turoyo Hertevin dialect Qaraqosh Bohtan Mlaḥsô Alqosh Barzani Inter-Zab Betanure Zakho Trans-Zab Barwar Koy Sanjaq
Neo-Aramaic_languages
Kurdish emir (1803–1869)
security in Bohtan gave him such popularity among its inhabitants, that many families from neighboring districts settled in the Emirate of Bohtan. This led
Bedir_Khan_Beg
Ethno-religious group of Kurdistan
and principalities, including the principalities of Sheikhan, Ezdikhan, Bohtan, Mahmudi, Donboli and the Emirate of Kilis. From the 14th century onward
Yazidis
Former Kurdish principality
military support to the Ottomans. They were in constant rivalry with Ardalan, Bohtan and Soran and its territory would therefore oscillate. Before the removal
Baban
Former Kurdish state
his influence to Mardin, Cizre and Nusaybin, compelling the ruler of the Bohtan Mir Sevdin, to accept his authority, which caused serious concern in the
Soran_Emirate
Modern Eastern Neo-Aramaic language
Bohtan Neo-Aramaic is a dialect of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic originally spoken by ethnic Assyrians on the plain of Bohtan in the Ottoman Empire. Its speakers
Neo-Aramaic_dialect_of_Bohtan
Massacres of Assyrians in Hakkari in the years 1843 and 1846
and 1846 of Assyrian Christians were carried out by the Kurdish emirs of Bohtan and Hakkari, Bedir Khan Beg and Nurullah Beg along with allied Assyrian
1843 and 1846 massacres in Hakkari
1843_and_1846_massacres_in_Hakkari
Iranic ethnic group
BC, Xenophon mentioned the Karduchoi, a people living to the east of the Bohtan River; this name survived in later times as Qardu or Corduene and other
Kurds
Topics referred to by the same term
to: Botan River, a tributary of the Tigris River in southeastern Turkey Bohtan (Cizre Botan), a medieval Kurdish principality Botan Rojhilat (born 1961)
Botan
Country in South Asia
"Dragon people", are similarly derived. Names similar to Bhutan—including Bohtan, Buhtan, Bottanthis, Bottan and Bottanter—began to appear in Europe around
Bhutan
Kurdish uprising against the Ottoman Empire in 1877–1878
Kenan Pasha. This was an effort by the two brothers to revive the former Bohtan Emirate. The revolt was a movement on a much smaller scale than the 1847
Second_Bedirkhanis_Revolt
Region of West Asia with a historical Kurdish presence
emirates included Baban, Soran, Badinan and Garmiyan in the south; Bakran, Bohtan (or Botan) and Badlis in the north, and Mukriyan and Ardalan in the east
Kurdistan
Mandarin Chinese (59,000) Turkmen (38,000) Czech Domari Lomavren Pontic Greek Bohtan Neo-Aramaic Tat language Russian sign language A total of 14 language families
List_of_languages_of_Russia
Kurdish poet and mystic (c. 1570–1640)
born c. 1570 in Cizre (Bohtan, in present-day Turkey) and died c. 1640 in Diyarbakır (Ottoman Empire). Born in Cizre of Bohtan around year 1570, Cizîrî
Melayê_Cizîrî
Municipality in Şırnak, Turkey
Mongol suzerainty 1252–1261 Ilkhanate 1262–1335 Bohtan 1336/1337–1456 Aq Qoyunlu 1456–1495/1496 Bohtan 1496–1847 Under Safavid suzerainty 1507–1515 Under
Cizre
Battle between Egypt and the Ottoman Empire (1839)
summer. According to a story, Bedir Khan Beg Emir of the principality of Bohtan who had just been besieged by the forces of Hafiz Mehmed Pasha during the
Battle_of_Nezib
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
List_of_ethnic_Assyrians
Modern Eastern Aramaic or Syriac language
few speakers remain in Turkey. The closest related language variety is Bohtan Neo-Aramaic. Hertevin also shares many similarities with Turoyo. Hértevin
Neo-Aramaic dialect of Hertevin
Neo-Aramaic_dialect_of_Hertevin
Kurdish emirate of Şirvan
from Bitlis to Hakkâri including Kurtalan and its rulers were loyal to Bohtan Emirate to the south and its leader Bedir Khan Beg. Although removed from
Emirate_of_Şirvan
Ancient region, today in Turkey
Encyclopædia Britannica, Gordyene is the ancient name of the region of Bohtan, now Şırnak Province. It is mentioned as Beth Qardu in Syriac sources and
Gordyene
1830–38 Kurdish anti-Ottoman rebellion
parts of Erbil. To the north, his domain extended into Cizre and parts of Bohtan, and by 1835 it also encompassed sections of the Bahdinan and Baban Kurdish
Mir_Muhammad_Rebellion
Kurdish prince of Rawanduz
Emirate (1813–1838) centered in Soran. He campaigned against the Emirate of Bohtan in 1834 and brought its ruler under his authority. Mir Kor had the title
Mir_Muhammad_of_Rawanduz
Province of Turkey
dissolution of his Emirate. After the fall of his main rival, Bedir Khan Beg of Bohtan sought to extend his dominion by annexing the Assyrian regions in Hakkari
Hakkâri_Province
Pre-WWI Neo-Aramaic dialects
comprising what had been ancient Assyria. Turoyo Hertevin dialect Qaraqosh Bohtan Mlaḥsô Alqosh Barzani Inter-Zab Betanure Zakho Trans-Zab Barwar Koy Sanjaq
Northeastern_Neo-Aramaic
Assyrian people living in Belgium
diaspora living in Belgium are of Turkish descent, mostly from the towns of Bohtan (Beth-Qardu), Tur-Abdin and Hakkâri. The first Assyrians came to Belgium
Assyrians_in_Belgium
Ethnic group native to Mesopotamia
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Assyrians
District in Şırnak Province, Turkey
the Tur Abdin region, while the eastern part is considered part of the Bohtan region. İdil District contains three beldes, sixty-five villages, of which
İdil_District
areas, which were usually called tribes. Albaq (Elbek) Āshīṯā Barwar Baz Bohtan Deyree Diz Doskee Gawar Gawar Pinyānish Halamon Ishtazin (Lesser Jilu) Jilu
List_of_Assyrian_tribes
Major Mesopotamian civilization
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Assyria
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Ancient_Mesopotamian_religion
Highest mountain of the Hindu Kush range, located in Pakistan
will bring death to the trespasser. These mountain fairies are known as "Bohtan Doyak", the "stone throwers". Akhlan Terich Khyber Pakhtunkhwa List of mountains
Terich_Mir
Branch of the Afroasiatic languages
(dialect continuum) Sureth Assyrian Neo-Aramaic Christian Urmi Neo-Aramaic Bohtan Neo-Aramaic Senaya Neo-Aramaic Chaldean Neo-Aramaic Koy Sanjaq Christian
Semitic_languages
homes. Bohtan. Located in around Cizre in Bohtan Plains in Sirnak province, the mountainous district of Barwar d-Bohtan (Pervari), straddles the Bohtan River
List_of_Assyrian_settlements
Ottoman general and governor
of Badr Khan in 1846, which saw him soundly defeated and the Emirate of Bohtan brought under direct Ottoman control. Some time following the Hungarian
Omar_Pasha
Ancient kingdom in Upper Mesopotamia (132 BC–214 AD)
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Osroene
Social movement
exist over the borders in southeastern Turkey (Mardin, Diyarbakır, Harran, Bohtan, Kültepe, Hakkari), northeastern Syria (Al-Hasakah, Qamlishi Khabur delta)
Assyrian_nationalism
Municipality in Siirt, Turkey
Anamnez, Anamneza bi Kurmancî (in Kurdish and Turkish). p. 57. "Kaza Eruh / Bohtan / Botan". Virtual Genocide Memorial. Retrieved 2023-09-17. "Türkiye Mülki
Eruh
Neo-Aramaic varieties
Barwari Qudshanis (just south of Lake Van) Tkhuma Tal Lewin Bohtan (Neo-Aramaic dialect of Bohtan) Northern Iraq (Nineveh Plains): Tel Keppe Alqosh Batnaya
Suret_language
Standard form of the Hebrew language
Eastern Central Mlaḥsô Surayt Neo-Mandaic Northeastern Christian Barwar Bohtan Hértevin Koy Sanjaq Christian Qaraqosh Senaya Suret Urmia Christian Jewish
Modern_Hebrew
Eparch of the Maronite Catholic Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon of Los Angeles
Coorilos Paulose Thoma Darmo Baselios Paulose II Languages Sureth Turoyo Bohtan Neo-Aramaic Garshuni Hertevin Koy Sanjaq Christian Mlaḥsô Senaya Syriac
Abdallah_Elias_Zaidan
Kurdish diplomat
Crete to Bedir Khan Beg, the last hereditary ruler of the Principality of Bohtan, and his spouse Rewshen. He worked as an official in the Ottoman judicial
Emin_Ali_Bedir_Khan
Written and orally transmitted literature in Kurdish languages
founder of a school of Kurmanji poets who wrote in the sub-dialect of Jazira/Bohtan. Cizîrî left behind a large number of poems, including qasidas (odes) and
Kurdish_literature
Semitic language
Syriac myz – Classical Mandaic xrm – Armazic bjf – Barzani Neo-Aramaic bhn – Bohtan Neo-Aramaic hrt – Hertevin Neo-Aramaic aij – Inter-Zab Neo-Aramaic tmr – Jewish
Aramaic
Eastern Christian denomination
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
Assyrian_Church_of_the_East
Diverse languages between the Black and Caspian seas
in the Caucasus: Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, with around 30,000 speakers, and Bohtan Neo-Aramaic, with around 1,000 speakers. Both of these were brought to the
Languages_of_the_Caucasus
Ottoman statesman and general (died 1806)
"Resistance to centralisation in the Ottoman periphery: the Kurdish Baban and Bohtan emirates", Middle East Studies, vol. 55, no. 4, pp. 519–539, doi:10.1080/00263206
Ibrahim_Pasha_Baban
City in Turkey
between 990 and 1085. The dynasty's foundation was laid by a chief from the Bohtan (Botkhti) tribe named Badh ibn Dustak, who captured Mayyafariqin (modern
Diyarbakır
1930 Kurdish uprising in eastern Turkey
Cemilpasha, Khamil, the son of Ibrahim Pasha, Rassoul Agha Mohammed from the Bohtan area and Mustafa and Bozan Sahin. But the plan was not executed as planned
Ararat_rebellion
Pakistani former actress and model (born 1991)
2019. "Bedardi Saiyaan Official". harpalgeo.tv. Retrieved 17 June 2018. "Bohtan". "Eagerly awaited Pakistani TV series 'Ghar Titli Ka Par' all set to go
Sanam_Chaudhry
Major Kurdish tribe
"Donbol-e Bokht" since the "most authentic" theory said that they originated in Bohtan, an area in what is now southeast Turkey between Siirt and Cizre. It appears
Donboli_tribe
Roman province located in modern-day Turkey, Syria, and Lebanon
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Roman_Syria
Mamluk Sultanate Pro-Safavid Kurds Qizilbashs Ottoman Empire Supported by: Bohtan Principality of Bitlis Emirate of Hasankeyf Kingdom of Imereti (1517) Pro-Ottoman
List of wars involving Iran (before 1979)
List_of_wars_involving_Iran_(before_1979)
Former Kurdish Principality
Zakho in the west. To the north, Bahdinan bordered the principalities of Bohtan and Hakkâri, and to the south it bordered the principality of Soran. The
Bahdinan
Governorate (province) of Syria
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Hasakah_Governorate
Kurdish writer (1893–1951)
was born to Emin Ali Bedir Khan, son of the last emir of the Emirate of Bohtan, Bedir Khan Beg, and Seniha Hanım, who was possibly a Yezidi Princess. Sources
Celadet_Alî_Bedirxan
Dialect of Middle Aramaic
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Syriac_language
Church of the East Syriac Rite of Christianity
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Church_of_the_East
Historical region of West Asia
rival Mir Muhammed, Bedir Khan Beg, the last Kurdish Emir of the Emirate of Bohtan, sought to extend his dominion by annexing the Assyrian regions in Hakkari
Hakkari_(historical_region)
Dialect of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
Christian Neo-Aramaic dialect of Barwar
Christian_Neo-Aramaic_dialect_of_Barwar
into the hills of the Bohtan and Hakkari districts, as a new diocese was created in the fifteenth century for Atel and Bohtan, and perhaps around the
Dioceses of the Church of the East, 1318–1552
Dioceses_of_the_Church_of_the_East,_1318–1552
Language policy in the Soviet Union
Kashkadarian Central Asian Arabic Northwest Semitic Aramaic Neo-Aramaic Suret Bohtan Neo-Aramaic Urmian Judeo-Neo-Aramaic Tungustic Languages Southern Tungustic
Languages_of_the_Soviet_Union
City in Iraq
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Zakho
Various entities in the Middle East, 1500s–1800s
the Kurdish chiefdoms under direct control. Ardalan Bahdinan Baban Bitlis Bohtan Bradost Donboli Eğil Genç Hakkari Emirate of Hasankeyf Principality of Hizan [tr]
Kurdish_emirates
Emirate of Bradost (1510–1609) Zafaranlu principality (1600-1922) Emirate of Bohtan (before 1514–1847) Emirate of Soran (before 1514–1836) Principality of Pinyaşi
List of Kurdish dynasties and countries
List_of_Kurdish_dynasties_and_countries
Turkish-speaking Assyrian community in Kirkuk
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
Citadel_Christians
Eastern Catholic church based primarily in Iraq
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
Chaldean_Catholic_Church
Fire in Hamdaniya, Iraq
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
2023_Qaraqosh_wedding_fire
16th century Kurdish prince
Emîr Şeref bin Emîr Bedir was a Kurdish prince of the Bohtan principality in the early 16th century, active approximately between 1500 and 1520. Sharafkhan
Şeref_bin_Bedir
Dialect of Neo-Aramaic, spoken in Iran
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
Christian Neo-Aramaic dialect of Urmia
Christian_Neo-Aramaic_dialect_of_Urmia
Kurdish poet (1590–1660)
his studies, he travelled to Hizan, Finik, Heşete and also to Cizre of Bohtan where he might have studied under Melayê Cizîrî. Instead of becoming a mullah
Feqiyê_Teyran
19th-century emir of the Hakkari Emirate
part in the massacres of Assyrians in Hakkari alongside Bedir Khan Beg of Bohtan. Together they launched large-scale attacks on Assyrian mountain communities
Nurullah_Beg
Eastern Christian denomination
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
Ancient_Church_of_the_East
Byzantine rule Isurian dynasty (AD 717–802) – Anatolia under Byzantine rule Bohtan (AD 8th century–1847) Nikephorian dynasty (AD 802–813) – Anatolia under
List_of_dynasties
Central Neo-Aramaic language
of two sets of particles: kal and kit. Turoyo Hertevin dialect Qaraqosh Bohtan Mlaḥsô Alqosh Barzani Inter-Zab Betanure Zakho Trans-Zab Barwar Koy Sanjaq
Turoyo_language
Descent of modern Assyrians from ancient Assyrians
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Assyrian_continuity
Eleventh and penultimate conflict of the Russo-Turkish wars
Russo-Turkish War came to a close, a Kurdish uprising broke out in the Bohtan region, led by the brothers Osman Pasha Bedirkhan and Hüseyin Kenan Pasha
Russo-Turkish_War_(1877–1878)
Shemʿon VIII Yahballaha, metropolitan of Gazarta; Yohannan of Atel and Bohtan (ʿAbdishoʿ's 'Gwerkel'), martyred in 1572; the future patriarch Shemʿon
Dioceses of the Church of the East after 1552
Dioceses_of_the_Church_of_the_East_after_1552
Areas of Kurdistan in the Ottoman Empire
emirates were Sheikhan, Mahmudi, Ezdikhan, Ardalan, Bahdinan, Baban, Bitlis, Bohtan, Bradost, Dumli, Hakkari, Hasankeyf, Kilis, Mukriyan, Pazuki, and Soran
Ottoman_Kurdistan
Kurdish tribe
Sharafnama, they are mentioned twice. First, in the chapter on the emirate of Bohtan, as being one of the four tribes living in Hakkâri. Second, in the chapter
Shekak_(tribe)
Kurdish emirate (?-1847)
ruling over the provinces independent from each other. the Emirate bordered Bohtan from the west, and Bidlis from north west. The first known emir Hakkari
Hakkâri_dynasty
Chaldean Catholic bishop of Basra (1867–1928)
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Eugene_Manna
Assyrian history (911–609 BCE)
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Neo-Assyrian_Empire
Type of dance
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
Assyrian_folk_dance
Northern Iraq annexed by Ottomans Belligerents Ottoman Empire Supported by: Bohtan Principality of Bitlis Emirate of Hasankeyf Kingdom of Imereti (1517) Pro-Ottoman
Ottoman–Persian War (1505–1517)
Ottoman–Persian_War_(1505–1517)
Political party in Iraq
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Christian_Alliance_(Iraq)
Genocide of Assyrians (1914–1924)
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Sayfo
UNESCO. Retrieved 2018-04-17. Fox, S. (2009). The Neo-Aramaic dialect of Bohtan. New Jersey: Gorgias Press. List of endangered languages in Europe at Ethnologue
List of endangered languages in Europe
List_of_endangered_languages_in_Europe
City in Syria
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Hasakah
Ethnic group
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
Assyrians_in_Jordan
Music of the Syriac Christianity liturgy
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Syriac_sacral_music
1860s. Yezdanşêr was born to Mir Sevdin (or Seyfeddin), a former Mir of Bohtan. Yezdanşêr was also the grandson of Bedir Khan Beg's uncle and a commander
Yezdanşêr
Kurdish politician
reference. In 1911, several members of the Bedir Khan family toured the Bohtan area, also Abdürrezzak who at the time intended to be elected as a deputy
Abdürrezzak_Bedir_Khan
Bridge
unique. According to a common myth associated with the bridge, the prince of Bohtan had ordered a skilled constructor to build him a bridge on the Tigris river
Delal_Bridge
and 1846, the Assyrians of Hakkari were massacred by the Kurdish emir of Bohtan and Hakkari, Bedir Khan Beg, and regional Ottoman forces. More than 10,000
History_of_the_Assyrians
Variety of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
Koy Sanjaq Christian Neo-Aramaic
Koy_Sanjaq_Christian_Neo-Aramaic
Cultural traditions of contemporary Assyrians
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
Assyrian_culture
Eastern Catholic church
Zealand Palestine Russia Sweden United Kingdom United States Language Barwar Bohtan Hertevin Suret Turoyo Koy Sanjaq Qaraqosh Senaya Urmia Mlaḥsô Subgroups
Syriac_Catholic_Church
Writing system
(1692–) Ancient Church of the East (1968–) Neo-Aramaic dialects Sureth Surayt Bohtan Hertevin Senaya Barwar Koy Sanjaq Bakhdida Urmia Mlaḥsô Syriac script Culture
Syriac_alphabet
occupied the middle section of the basin of the Jerm River (the modern-day Bohtan River) and was located approximately 70–80 kilometers north of the southern
Moxoene
BOHTAN
BOHTAN
BOHTAN
BOHTAN
Boy/Male
African, Hindu, Indian
Of the Natine Tribe
Boy/Male
Arabic, Hindu, Indian, Muslim, Sindhi
Full Moon
Girl/Female
Hindu
Cool going
Boy/Male
Hindu
With a flame
Boy/Male
Hindu
Versatile
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : from a short form of any of the various Germanic personal names formed with ragin ‘counsel’ as the first element (see, for example, Raymond, Reynold).English : from the medieval female personal name Rayne (from Old French reine ‘queen’, Latin regina).English and French : nickname from Old French raine ‘frog’ (Latin rana).Scottish : habitational name from a place called Rayne in Aberdeenshire, so named from an English dialect term meaning ‘strip of land’.
Girl/Female
Australian, Dutch, Hebrew
Gift from God
Biblical
Adramyttium the court of death
Girl/Female
Hindu
The name of Goddess Durga, Courage
Male
English
Variant spelling of English Yancy, possibly YANCEY means "Englishman, Yankee."
BOHTAN
BOHTAN
BOHTAN
BOHTAN
BOHTAN