Table of Contents
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BAYĀT
G. Doerfer
an important Turkish tribe. A substantial proportion of the Bayāt people must have entered Iran in the train of the Saljuq invaders in the first half of the 11th century.
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BAYĀT(Ī)
J. During
one of the old modes of the Irano-Arabic musical tradition, mentioned for the first time by Šayḵ Ṣafadī (15th century).
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BAYĀT-E EṢFAHĀN
M. Caton
or ĀVĀZ-e EṢFAHĀN, a musical system based on a specific collection of modal pieces (gūšahā) which are performed in a particular order.
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BAYĀT-E KORD
M. Caton
or KORD-e BAYĀT, a part of the modal system (dastgāh) of Šūr in Persian music.
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BAYĀT-E TORK
M. Caton
a musical system (āvāz, naḡma) and one of the branches of the modal system (dastgāh) of Šūr in traditional classical music.
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BAYATỊ, GAPPO
F. Thordarson
(Ger.: Georg-Gappo Baiew; 1869-1939), Ossetic man of letters.
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BAYĀŻ
M.-T. Dānešpažūh
literally “white,” usually a small paper notepad that opens lengthwise and was carried around in an inside pocket. Several such MS are found in various libraries.
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BAYAZIT
R. W. Edwards
(Bāyazīd; Osm. Bayezid), a stronghold located three kilometers southeast of the modern village of Doğubayazit, Turkey, and approximately twenty-five kilometers southwest of Mt. Ararat, important in the defense of Anatolia against invasion from Iran.
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BĀYBŪRTLŪ
P. Oberling
(also Bāybūrdlū), a Turkic tribe of northwestern Iran whose only vestiges seem to be the names of a few historical personalities.
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BĀYDŪ
B. Spuler
a son of Ṭaraḡāy and grandson of Hülegü (Hūlāgū), reigned as il-khan in Iran, 1295.