Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Kyle Giersdorf, better known as Bugha (/ ˈ b uː ɡ ə /), is an American professional gamer who is best known for playing Fortnite Battle Royale. [3] He is also known for winning the Fortnite World Cup 2019 and is often regarded as one of the best Fortnite players in the world.
Bugha al-Kabir or Bugha the Elder (died 862), prominent Turkish general in the Abbasid Caliphate; Bugha al-Sharabi or Bugha al-Saghir or Bugha the Younger (died 868), prominent Turkish general in the Abbasid Caliphate; Tala Buga, the khan of Golden Horde between 1287 and 1291; Kitbuqa Noyan (Kit-Bugha), a lieutenant and confidant of the Mongol ...
The 2019 solo event finals were held on July 28, 2019, and was won by 16-year-old American Kyle "Bugha" Giersdorf, who took home the US$3 million grand prize. [17] The scoring format in solos provided points for eliminations and for placement. Competitors received one point for each elimination and non-cumulative placement points.
Buqa (or Bugha) (died January 16, 1289) was a Mongol lord and chancellor who was instrumental in sweeping Arghun to power as the fourth Il-Khan of Iran in 1284 and became his chief minister and advisor, succeeding Shams ad-Din Juvayni whom Arghun had executed in October 1284. Buqa too was executed on Arghun's order in January 1289.
'Bugha the Greater/Elder'), also known as Bugha al-Turki (Arabic: بُغا التركي, lit. 'Bugha the Turk'), was a 9th-century Khazar general who served the Abbasid Caliphate . He was of Khazar [ 1 ] origin, and was acquired along with his sons as a military slave ( ghulam ) by al-Mu'tasim in 819/820. [ 2 ]
Khutlubuga (Armenian: Խութլու Բուղա), also Khutlu Buga or Qutlugh Buqa (Georgian: ხუტლუბუღა; died August, 1293), was an Armenian prince of the House of the Artsrunids, [2] and a court official of the Kingdom of Eastern Georgia in the second half of the 13th century, the son of Atabeg-Amirspasalar Sadun Mankaberdeli.
To suppress the rebellion, in 853 Caliph al-Mutawakkil dispatched a punitive expedition led by Bugha al-Kabir (also known as Bugha the Turk) who burned Tbilisi to the ground and had Ishaq decapitated, putting an end to the city's chance to become the center of an independent Islamic state in the Caucasus. The Abbasids chose not to rebuild the ...
Bugha al-Sharabi ("Bugha the Cupbearer"), also known as Bugha al-Saghir ("Bugha the Younger") to distinguish him from his unrelated contemporary Bugha the Elder, was a senior Turkic military leader in the mid-9th century Abbasid Caliphate.