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Al-Ahram produces a continually updated news website in the English language at english.ahram.org.e.g., [20] called Ahram Online. It also has an Arabic news website which was the 20th mostly visited website for 2010 in the MENA region . [ 21 ]
The National Authority for Military Production or National Organisation for Military Production (Egyptian Arabic: الهيئة القومية للإنتاج الحربي) is an Egyptian body with a legal personality affiliated with the Ministry of Military Production.
Al Ahram Al Arabi (Arabic: الأهرام العربى, romanized: al-Ahrām al-ʻArabī) is a political weekly magazine published in Cairo, Egypt. The publishing house of the magazine also owns Al Ahram and Al Ahram Weekly , two of the biggest media outlets in the country.
Akhbar el-Yom. Akhbar El Hawadeth; Akhbar El Nogoom; Akhbar El Riada; Al Akhbar; Al Youm El Sabea; Al Ahali; Al-Ahram. Al Ahram Al Arabiya (in various Arab countries) Al Ahram Al Duwali (international edition in Europe, USA, Canada) Al Ahram Al Masa'y (evening daily) Al-Ahram Hebdo in French; Al-Ahram Weekly in English; Al Ahrar; Al Alam Al ...
Ismailia awaits the third district, Al-Ahram, August 14, 2010. The Land of Turquoise, in the heart and mind of Egypt, Al-Ahram, July 7, 2010. The splitting of the sea for God's prophet Moses is a miracle, Al-Ahram, October 3, 2010. Declaration of liberation of the first Egyptian city written by: Dr. Younan Labib Rizk, Al-Ahram, October 8, 2003.
He was a journalist in 1991, and was a participant in the strategic report of Al-Ahram for many years, Al-Ahram strategic booklets, head of the education department and supervisor of readers' mail in Al-Ahram Evening newspaper in 1994, Al-Ahram Evening in 2004, and Assistant Editor-in-Chief of Al-Ahram Evening in 2007.
The Moors' Gate, also known as Magharibah Gate [24] [25] (Arabic: باب المغاربة Bāb al-Maghāriba; Hebrew: Shaar HaMughrabim), is the southernmost gate on the western flank of the compound, built directly over the Herodian-period gate known as the Gate of the Prophet (also known as Barclay's Gate, named for James Turner Barclay).
Ottoman Dung Gate during the Mandate period. The original gate was built after the establishment of the Maghrebi Quarter in the aftermath of the liberation of Jerusalem by Saladin in 1187. The Maghrebi Gate was rebuilt in 1313, during the Mamluk period, by Al-Nasir Muhammad bin Qalawun, during the same time that the Chain Gate was renovated. [6]