Table of Contents
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DEDE YŪSOF SĪNAČĀK
Tahsın Yazici
(b. Yenice on the Vardar in Ottoman Māqadūnīā [modern Macedonia] at an indeterminate date, d. Istanbul, 1546), Mawlawī Sufi shaikh, poet, and author.
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DĒDMARĪ, ḴᵛĀJA MOḤAMMAD-AʿẒAM
Shamsuddin Ahmad
(1691-1765), historian, poet, and Sufi of Kashmir.
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DEER
Cross-Reference
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DEFRÉMERY, Charles-François
Francis Richard
(b. Cambray, France, 18 December 1822, d. St.-Valéry-en Caux, France, 18 August 1883), French orientalist and scholar.
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DEH
Daniel Balland and Marcel Bazin
village, in Persia and Afghanistan.
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DEH MORĀSĪ ḠONDAY
Jim G. Shaffer
a Bronze Age archeological site located at 34° 90’ N, 65° 30’ E, adjacent to the village of Deh Morāsī, approximately 27 km southwest of Qandahār and 6.5 km east-southeast of Pahjwāʾī in southeastern Afghanistan.
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DEH-BOKRĪ
Pierre Oberling
Kurdish tribe of Kurdistan.
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DEH-E NOW
Hubertus von Gall
site of a group of four rock-cut tombs of the 4th-3rd centuries BCE, located about 25 km south of Bīsotūn in Kermānšāhān. It is possible that at least the two smaller tombs were astōdāns.
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DEHBĪD
Sayyed ʿAlī Āl-e Dāwūd
town in the šahrestān of Ābāda, Fārs (30° 37’ N, 53° 12’ E), situated on the Shiraz-Isfahan road in a plain 191 km northeast of Shiraz.
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DEHDĀR ŠIRĀZI, ʿEMĀD-al-DIN
Matthew Melvin-Koushki
with pen name taḵalloṣ ʿEyāni, the most prolific Persian author on lettrism in the 10th/16th century; has long been overshadowed by both his father , an astronomer-philosopher and his son, a mystical-philosopher.