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  • Abu Nuwas migrated to Baghdad and soon became renowned for his witty and humorous poetry, which dealt not ...been toppled and massacred by the caliph, Harun al-Rashid. He returned to Baghdad in 809 upon the death of Harun al-Rashid. The subsequent ascension of Muham ...
    7 KB (1,169 words) - 23:59, 18 October 2019
  • ...ving a richly decorated robe of honor from al-Qadir, the Abbasid caliph of Baghdad (1314). Persian miniature painting. Ilkhanid Period. Illustration from a co ...
    4 KB (566 words) - 09:11, 23 November 2021
  • According to thief of baghdad, "The issue of consent is always something the sex fascists have agonized o ...
    5 KB (738 words) - 06:14, 5 May 2016
  • ...ter about 1905 each was named after a city (Benares, Mecca, Medinah, Aden, Baghdad, Samara, Bassorah, Shammar, and Luristan), a new one appearing about every ...
    21 KB (3,101 words) - 00:54, 10 April 2015
  • ...n Shams al-Din Muhammad ibn Hasan al-Nawaji's ''Meadow of Gazelles,'' to [[Baghdad]], in the person of [[Abu Nuwas]], "enfant terrible" and first among Arab p ...[[The Book of One Thousand and One Nights]]. Libertine poets such as the [[Baghdad]] poet [[Abu Nuwas]] ([[750]]?–[[813]]?) flaunted their sexual conquests, o ...
    37 KB (5,894 words) - 19:26, 10 April 2019
  • love of boys raised fewer hackles. From ancient Greece to old Baghdad, ...
    40 KB (6,995 words) - 18:43, 10 May 2016
  • poems from the poet of Baghdad's '1001 Nights'. Available from the ...
    73 KB (10,917 words) - 21:45, 12 May 2019
  • ...les'' (in Arabic poetry beautiful boys are frequently called gazelles), to Baghdad, in the person of [[Abu Nuwas]], "enfant terrible" and first among Arab poe ...
    43 KB (6,779 words) - 19:58, 26 November 2019
  • ...) to Kufa , where he lived an openly gay and bohemian lifestyle, <ref>When Baghdad Ruled the Muslim World By Hugh Kennedy, p121</ref> to live with him as his ::Malik, an African slave boy allegedly bought by an Arab trader in Baghdad for 1,000 gold dinars (whence his nickname of ''Hazardinari)'' was captured ...
    139 KB (23,111 words) - 17:05, 21 January 2019
  • ...ronism, confine themselves to depicting the people, manners and customs of Baghdad and Mosul, Damascus and Cairo, during the Abbaside epoch, and he makes a po ...s “The original of this entertaining work appears to have been composed in Baghdad about the eleventh century; another less popular but very spirited version ...
    388 KB (65,888 words) - 17:55, 19 June 2019