User:Tarazanmoula/sandbox

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baka
Baka (Mecca) was mentioned by David in his Psalm 84 describing the Vally of Baka that have God's House. David stayed as a fugitive in Paran desert for years. Psalm 84:4-7 (The Greek Septuagint translation): " Blessed are they that dwell in thy house: they will praise thee evermore. Selah. 5  Blessed is the man whose help is of thee, O  Lord; in his heart he has purposed to go up 6  the valley of Baca, to the place which he was appointed, for [there] the law-giver will  grant blessings. 7 They shall go from strength  to strength: the God of gods shall be seen in Sion". 3-96 imran Baka is another name of Mecca tafseer ibn kathir (Quran 3:96)

sela
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teman
teman yaqut, ibn taymia teman hadith

paran
-- The desert of Pharan according to the old Arabian sources, neglected by Biblical research, is in the mountainous area of Hedjaz. Desert of Paran is transliated as Hijaz in the Aramaeic Samaritan Bible. surname farani is from faran the mountains near mecca in hijaz .page 236 sela of yathrib, page 347 dhu rimma poem sela, page 366 baka, 285 paran=>paran mountains around mecca was named after Paran son of Amalek Al-Muqaddasi says the red sea branches into two branches by the side of the Arabian peninsula known as paran Sebeos the armenian historian describing the Arab conquest that they assembled and came out from Paran Paran map.aramco

zion
There were two migrations of J1, the first occurring in the Neolithic period, spreading J1 to Ethiopia and Europe (Semino et al. 2004). A second wave of J1 occurred in the 7th century, spread by Arab expansion from the southern Levant into North Africa J-M267 was spread by two temporally distinct migratory episodes, the most recent one probably associated with the diffusion of Arab people A second wave of J1 occurred in the 7th century, spread by Arab expansion from the southern Levant into North Africa. J1 originated in the southern part of the Middle East (Nebel et al. 2001) J1 is the only haplogroup that researchers consider “Semitic” in origin because it is restricted almost completely to Middle Eastern populations (Semino et al. 2004) There were two migrations of J1, the first occurring in the Neolithic period, spreading J1 to Ethiopia and Europe (Semino et al. 2004). A second wave of J1 occurred in the 7th century, spread by Arab expansion from the southern Levant into North Africa. This secondary migration is also distinguished by a mutational event at marker YCAII—YCAIIa=22 and YCAIIb=22 (Semino et al. 2004). J-M267 was spread by two temporally distinct migratory episodes, the most recent one probably associated with the diffusion of Arab people Near Eastern samples tend to separate according to the presence of Arab Y chromosome lineages, suggesting that the Arab expansion played a major role in shaping the current genetic structuring within the Fertile Crescent.http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1529-8817.2005.00224.xPopulation Structure in the Mediterranean Basin: A Y Chromosome Perspective capelli A MOSAIC OF PEOPLE: http://www.jogg.info/11/coffman.htm J1 is the only haplogroup that researchers consider “Semitic” in origin because it is restricted almost completely to Middle Eastern populations, with a very low frequency in Italy and Greece as well (Semino et al. 2004). There were two migrations of J1, the first occurring in the Neolithic period, spreading J1 to Ethiopia and Europe (Semino et al. 2004). A second wave of J1 occurred in the 7th century, spread by Arab expansion from the southern Levant into North Africa. J1 originated in the southern part of the Middle East while J2 originated in the northern part (Nebel et al. 2001)

Journal of Genetic Genealogy vol1 n 1     ISSN: 1557-3796

mawardi, ibn taymia, tabari, david 84,wahb tel paran