16,947 research outputs found

    [Stammbuch Dorothea Bahr]

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    [STAMMBUCH DOROTHEA BAHR] [Stammbuch Dorothea Bahr] ( - ) Cover ( - ) Exlibris: Hans Stula ( - ) Besitzvermerk, S. 1 (1) Einträge, S. 2 - 18 (2) Einträge, S. 20 - 39 (20) Einträge, S. 40 - 59 (40) Einträge, S. 61 - 79 (61) Einträge, S. 80 - 85 (80) Eintrag, hinterer Spiegel ( -

    Bayreuth /

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    "Die ersten drei Aufsätze sind von Anna Bahr-Mildenburg, die Übrigen von Hermann Bahr verfasst."Mode of access: Internet

    PENAFSIRAN KATA AL-BAHRAIN DALAM TAFSIR AL-BAHR AL-MUHITH

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    ABSTRAK Penelitian ini dilengkapi dan mengkaji tentang Penafsiran Kata Al-Bahrain dalam Tafsir Al-Bahr Al-Muhith. Adapun tujuan dari masalah adalah untuk mengetahui kata Al-Bahrain di dalam Al-Qur'an dan mengetahui isi penafsiran ayat-ayat tentang kata Al-Bahrain di dalam tafsir Al-Bahr Al-Muhith. Adapun jenis penelitian adalah penelitian kepustakaan (library research) yang digunakan dari sumber data primer tafsir Al-Bahr Al�Muhith. Penelitian juga menggunakan metode maudhu'i (tematik). Dan langkah-langkah pokok analisis data dari penelitian yaitu tentang menafsirkan ayat-ayat tentang Al-Bahrain dalam Al-Qur'an dan menafsirkannya kembali ke dalam ayat-ayat tentang Al-Bahrain dalam tafsir Al-Bahr Al-Muhith. Hasil dari penelitian yang didasari dari ayat-ayat yang mengkaji tentang kata Al-bahrain itu yang berada dalam surat Al-Kahfi ayat 60, surat Al-Furqan ayat 53 dan surta Ar-Rahman ayat 19-20. Yang di dalamnya tersebut akan menjelaskan tentang kata Al-bahrain yang sangat berbeda-beda di dalam setiap maknanya. Dalam penafsiran Abu Hayyan yang dituliskan dari tafsir Al-Bahr Al-Muhith tentang Al�Bahrain adalah yang berasal dari kalimat majma' al-bahraini lautan asin dan lautan air tawar yang mana tempat nabi Khindir yang pernah berada disitu namun terletak pada kedua lautan tersebut. Dalam menguraikan tentang tafsir Abu Hayyan dalam tafsir Al-Bahr Al�Muhith yang dapat mengunakan metode tahlili (analisis) sehingga, dapat digolongkan sebagai tafsir yang bercorak lughawi/bahasa. Kata Kunci : Al-bahrain, Tafsir Al-bahr Al-Muhith. ABSTRACT This research completes and examines the interpretation of the words Al-Bahrain in Tafsir Al-Bahr Al-Muhith. The aim of the problem is to find out the word Al-Bahrain in the Al-Qur'an and find out the contents of the interpretation of the verses regarding the word Al-Bahrain in the Tafsir Al-Bahr Al-Muhith commentary. This type of research is library research which uses primary data sources of the interpretation Al-Bahr Al-Muhith. This research also uses the maudhu'i (thematic) method. And the main steps of data analysis from research are about interpreting the verses about Al�Bahrain in the Al-Qur'an and reinterpreting them into verses about Al-Bahrain in the Al-Bahr Al-Muhith commentary. The results of the research are based on the examining the word Al-Bahrain is found in Surah Al-Kahf verse 60, Surah Al-Furqan verse 53 and Surah Al-Rahman verses 19-20. This will explain the word Al-Bahrain, which has very different meanings. In Abu Hayyan's interpretation, written in Al-Bahr Al-Muhith's interpretation of the Al-Bahrain is comes from the sentence majma' Al-Bahraini a salt sea and fresh water sea, where the Prophet Khindir once there, but is located in both seas. In explaining the interpretation Abu Hayyan in the interpretation of Al-Bahr Al-Muhith's, one can use the tahlili (analysis) method so that it can be classified as a lughawi/linguistic interpretation. Keywords: Al-bahrain, Al-Bahr Al-Muhith interpretation

    St. Deroin cemetery

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    Headstone with inscription: 'Anna, wife of E.R.Hood, Born May 22, 1853, Died Aug. 27, 1883

    Pelican Road

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    By Howard Bahr MacAdam/Cage (Hardcover, $24.00, ISBN: 1596922893, 5/2008) From the acclaimed author of The Judas Field, a beautiful and haunting portrait of the men who served on the great American railroads. It’s Christmas Eve, 1940. Along an isolated stretch of railway between Meridian, Mississippi, and New Orleans, Louisiana, two locomotives travel toward one another through the dark winter landscape. A.P. Dunn, engineer aboard the 4512 southbound freight, reminisces about the last trip he made through the snow. And though he can remember every detail about that voyage in 1923, what he can’t recall are the events of a few hours ago—where he ate breakfast, how he got the gash on his forehead, or what he did to make his crew treat him so strangely. On the northbound Silver Star, a luxury passenger train packed with returning college students and gift-bearing families, brakeman Artemus Kane has his own memories to contend with: French trenches and German snipers, a failed marriage, and a too-short layover spent with Anna, the brilliant and lonely woman he has just left behind in the Crescent City. In Pelican Road, Howard Bahr returns to his greatest theme—the tragic nobility of those attempting to overcome difficult situations through love, honor, and sacrifice—and shows that on the railway, catastrophe is never more than a distracted moment away.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/mwp_books/1256/thumbnail.jp

    An Article About Albertus C. Van Raalte, Author Unknown, Except for Parts Taken from an Article by Anna C. Post

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    An article about Albertus C. Van Raalte, author unknown, except for parts taken from an article by Anna C. Post. The author knew first generation persons in the Holland settlement and therefore, the article has some value.https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/vrp_1890s/1012/thumbnail.jp

    Black Flower: A Novel of the Civil War

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    By Howard Bahr Picador (Paperback, $13.00, ISBN: 0312265077, 7/2000) Bahr makes an impressive debut with a haunting tale of a brief but bloody encounter on the road to Nashville, which helped put paid to the Confederate cause in the latter stages of America\u27s Civil War. Although a university graduate, Bushrod Carter is a private soldier in the 21st Mississippi, a storied regiment in the battered Southern army commanded by General John Bell Hood. Scattered by Sherman\u27s march to the sea, Bushrod and his fellow veterans (wearied by three years of unremitting combat) find themselves facing fresh Union forces outside Franklin, Tenn., in late November of 1864. Ordered to attack, they advance across an open field to meet their entrenched foe on a fine autumn afternoon. After a fierce battle (seen only through the eyes of women and children in the farmstead Rebel officers have requisitioned as a hospital), the real horrors begin. Bandsmen bearing wounded from the battlefield by the light of guttering torches find Bushrod (who\u27s sustained a concussion and lost a finger) almost by chance beneath a pile of corpses, but his two best friends did not survive the engagement. Meantime, under cover of darkness, scavengers roam the killing ground stripping the dead of their valuables, and a former teacher crazed by the carnage prays that God will forgive the South. Apparently little the worse for wear, Bushrod eventually manages to locate and bury his dead mates. Assisting him in this sad business is Anna Hereford, a relative visiting the family that owns the farm. While nearly dehumanized by what he\u27s been through, the young―and doomed―rifleman feels attracted to Anna, who warily returns his interest. He soon follows his fallen comrades, however, leaving Anna to grieve for what might have been. A bleakly effective and economical account of men and women caught up in a bestial conflict. ―Copyright © 1997 Kirkus Associates, LP.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/mwp_books/1042/thumbnail.jp
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