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PILGRIMS (5) answer(s).
 
SrlItem
1
ID:   086870


Curious life of the lowly passport / Meyer, Karl E   Journal Article
Meyer, Karl E Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract No document confers as much awesome power as the lowly passport. It can save or claim lives, liberate or incarcerate, speed or derail passage through ports of entry. It can sow diplomatic havoc, or indeed (as it has)cause a government to fall.
Key Words Diplomats  Curious Life  Lowly Passport  Sovereign Barriers  Egyptian Tomb  Pilgrims 
Merchants 
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2
ID:   030932


India through Chinese eyes: Sir William Meyer endowment lectures / Sen, Surendernath 1979  Book
Sen S.N. Book
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Publication Calcutta, K.P.Begchi & company, 1979.
Description v, 199p.hbk
Key Words Education  India  Philosophers  Pilgrims  Kings - Chronology 
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
019115954/SEN 019115MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   107385


Mastung massacre / Wahab, Abdul   Journal Article
Wahab, Abdul Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Key Words Balochistan  Pilgrims  Hazara  Quetta-Taftan  Pakistan - 1967-1977 
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4
ID:   156890


Rest house for travellers and pilgrims in ancient India / Kumar, Bachchan   Journal Article
Kumar, Bachchan Journal Article
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Key Words Ancient India  Pilgrims  Rest House 
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5
ID:   108482


Women as pilgrims: memoirs of Iranian women travelers to Mecca / Mahallati, Amineh   Journal Article
Mahallati, Amineh Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract A hitherto neglected aspect of the Iranian women's lives and activities is their traveling and travelogues. A number of Iranian women pilgrims to Mecca and the Shi'ite holy shrines of Mesopotamia during the past four centuries have left behind memoirs of their travels. They recorded interesting details about their spiritual experience as pilgrims to the holy lands of Islam and of the difficulties of the journey, especially the notoriously dangerous land route from Iran to Mecca through the Arabian Desert. This paper examines four examples of that genre, the oldest dating from the early eighteenth and the other three from the late nineteenth centuries. As expected, the authors were all members of upper class families: one was a princess, another a former queen, and the other two were also affiliated with the ruling families in one way or another. However, they shared the same goals with all other female, and male, pilgrims: to perform their Muslim religious duty of hajj and to do it right. They all wrote about their spiritual satisfaction but also of the disadvantages and the extra burden that a woman experienced in her pilgrimage journey, simply for being a woman.
Key Words Iran  Women  Pilgrims  Travel  Mecca 
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