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 1  I             |        and doughty deeds of their tribes,-as their own proverb has
 2  I             |          cult was Allâh, and most tribes set up a shrine for him
 3  I             |      sacrificial stone by several tribes, including that of HuDHeil.~ ~ ./. 
 4  I             |        some of the more important tribes, like Kindeh and Ghassân,
 5  I             |       objects to which individual tribes paid worship were then all
 6  I             |         the neighbouring powerful tribes to be insulted or destroyed,
 7  I             |   important of these neighbouring tribes, and the Qurâis proposed~ ~ ./. 
 8  I             |    unexpected sup-port in the two tribes of El 'Aus and El 'Hazrag,
 9  I             |           YaTHrib from the Jewish tribes who held it.~ ~Some of these
10  I             |           other of the conquering tribes, so that it contained in
11  I             |        men of the Aus and 'Hazrag tribes, accordingly met him at
12  I             |       means an easy task. The two tribes of El 'Aus and El 'Hazrag
13  I             |    gathered from the neighbouring tribes, marched upon Medînah, being
14  I             |          collision with the other tribes. Fifteen hundred men only
15  I             | endeavoured to reduce the Bedawîn tribes to submission, but wrote
16  I             |      accession of numerous border tribes.~ ~Two years after the truce
17  I             |        here on earth. The Bedawîn tribes in the neighbourhood gave
18  I             |         Deputations,' the Bedawîn tribes one after another sending
19  I             |         view to reduce the Syrian tribes to submission, they having
20  I             |        Syria, where the turbulent tribes might find scope for their
21  I             |       that so long as the various tribes wasted their strength in
22  I             |         the gods of the different tribes; the annual fairs and eisteddfodau (
23  I             |    paragraph continues] Christian tribes; there is not the least
24  I             |          supremacy over the other tribes, and whose worldly prosperity
25  I             |          current among the desert tribes for ages before his time.
26  I             |         means for uniting all the tribes into one confederation with
27  I             |         the occasion on which the tribes assembled at Mecca and,
28  I             |        was composed of the Jewish tribes settled in and around the
29  I             |       apostles sent to particular tribes, the stories of some of
30  I             |        for consolidating the Arab tribes, but it is burdensome and
31  I             |      words and locutions of other tribes, and we should consequently
32  I             |          The division into twelve tribes. The miracle of smiting
33  I,       II(1)|     current among the Jewish Arab tribes.~ ~ ./. 
34  I,       II   |         Isaac, and Jacob, and the Tribes, and what was brought to
35  I,       II   |         Isaac, and Jacob, and the Tribes were Jews or Christians?
36  I,      III   |         Isaac, and Jacob, and the tribes, and what was given to Moses,
37  I,      III(1)|           rivalry between the two tribes of El Aus and El 'Hazrag,
38  I,       IV   |       Ishmael, and Jacob, and the tribes and Jesus, and Job, and
39  I,      VII(2)|        works of Ptolemy, were two tribes of the ancient Arabs, extinct
40  I,      VII   |           cut them up into twelve tribes, each a nation; and we revealed
41  I,       IX(1)|      twelve thousand men, and two tribes of idolatrous Arabs. Too
42  I,      XVI(2)|      Arabs, like most half-savage tribes, used to consider superior
43 II,    XVIII(1)|          referred to appear to be tribes of the Turkomans, and the
44 II,   XXXIII(1)|       confederation of the Jewish tribes with the Arabs of Mecca,
45 II,   XLVIII(1)|               Alluding to certain tribes who held aloof from the
46 II,   XLVIII(2)|         Mohammed's rival, and the tribes that had apostatized from
47 II,     XLIX(4)|     frequent disputes between the tribes of Aus and 'Hazrag at Medînah.
48 II,     XLIX   |            and made you races and tribes that ye may know each other.~ ~
49 II,      CII(2)|   respective nobility of the Arab tribes, that the Abu Menaf clan
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