Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mugni> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 49 of
49
with 100 triples per page.
- Mugni abstract "The mugni (archlute) resembles a tar except that the two globes are connected and not separated like the tar's. During Ghuri rulers and Khwarizmi (12th – 13th century) music grew. Two notable theorists of this era were Fakhr al-Din al-Razi and Nasir al-Din al-Tusi. Another Persian theorist was Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi who was famous for Pearl of Crown (Durrat al-taj). In the Treasure-House of Gift (Kanz al -Tahaf) an important work in 1350, ud (lute), rubab (lute), mughni (archlute), chang (harp), nuzhe, qanun (psaltery), Ghaychak (spiked viol), pisha (fife) and nay-i siyah (reedpipe) are completely described. In other places, dutar (two strings) and setar (three strings) exquisite of poet Hafez are mentioned.".
- Mugni wikiPageID "18583990".
- Mugni wikiPageLength "1236".
- Mugni wikiPageOutDegree "22".
- Mugni wikiPageRevisionID "668703341".
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Archlute.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Category:Azerbaijani_musical_instruments.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Category:Iranian_musical_instruments.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Category:Turkish_musical_instruments.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Chang_(instrument).
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Dutar.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Fakhr_ad-Din_ar-Razi.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Fakhr_al-Din_al-Razi.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Ghaychak.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Hafez.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Khwarizmi.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Muḥammad_ibn_Mūsā_al-Khwārizmī.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Nasir_al-Din_al-Tusi.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Nay-i_siyah.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Nuzhe.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Oud.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Pisha.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Psaltery.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Qanun_(instrument).
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Qutb_al-Din_al-Shirazi.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Rubab_(instrument).
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Safi_al-Din_al-Urmawi.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Setar.
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Tar_(lute).
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLink Tar_(string_instrument).
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mugni".
- Mugni wikiPageWikiLinkText "mugni".
- Mugni hasPhotoCollection Mugni.
- Mugni wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Azerbaijani_musical_instruments.
- Mugni wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Iranian_musical_instruments.
- Mugni wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Mugni wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Turkish_musical_instruments.
- Mugni subject Category:Azerbaijani_musical_instruments.
- Mugni subject Category:Iranian_musical_instruments.
- Mugni subject Category:Turkish_musical_instruments.
- Mugni type Instrument.
- Mugni type Instrument.
- Mugni comment "The mugni (archlute) resembles a tar except that the two globes are connected and not separated like the tar's. During Ghuri rulers and Khwarizmi (12th – 13th century) music grew. Two notable theorists of this era were Fakhr al-Din al-Razi and Nasir al-Din al-Tusi. Another Persian theorist was Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi who was famous for Pearl of Crown (Durrat al-taj).".
- Mugni label "Mugni".
- Mugni sameAs m.04cqjfq.
- Mugni sameAs Q6932203.
- Mugni sameAs Q6932203.
- Mugni wasDerivedFrom Mugni?oldid=668703341.
- Mugni isPrimaryTopicOf Mugni.