Mogul (W3)
Den "Mogul" trifft man heute kaum noch allein an. Wenn er überhaupt noch in Erscheinung tritt dann kombiniert als "Baumogul" oder "Medienmogul" (engl. "movie mogul": antedate 1973 (?)). Seine Urahnen waren die "Mongolen", engl. "Mongolian" - aber dies auch nur sehr vage. Im 16. Jh. eroberten Kriegsherren aus Afghanistan große Teile Indiens und konnten sich dort bis ins 18. Jh. (/ 1857) an der Macht halten. Sie selbst nannten sich "gurkani" ("gurkan" = dt. "Schwiegersohn"). Das begründeten sie damit, dass ihr Stammvater "Timur" eine Prinzessin geheiratet hatte, die mit dem mongolischen Eroberer Dschingis Khan verwandt war. Die Europäer bezogen sich ebenfalls auf diese verwandtschaftliche Beziehung und nannten die afghanischen Herrscher "Timuriden" oder "Mongolen", woraus sich die "Mogulen" entwickelten. Die Europäer, die Engländer, lernten während der Kolonialzeit pers. "mugul" (mongol. "Mongyol") über die mit arabischem Alphabet geschriebene mit Hindi verwandte Urdu-Sprache kennen.Im englischen gibt es ein weiteres engl. "mogul" = dt. "Buckel auf einer Skipiste" geht auf ein umgangssprachliches dt. "Mugel" = dt. "Klumpen", "kleiner Hügel" zurück. Einen Abkömmling von dt. "Mugel" findet man auch als russ. "mogila" = dt. "Grab", "Grabhügel".
Großmogul (Kaiser) Mohammed Akbar, Eigentlicher Name: Dschelal ed-Din Mohammed, Feldherr, Großmogul (1556-1605) (15.10.1542 (Umarkot) - 16.10.1605 (Agra)
Großmogul Aurangzeb von Indien (Alamgir (Welteroberer)), Großmogul (1658-1707) (03.11.1618 (Dohad Gujarat) - 21.02.1707 (Ahmadnagar)
Lit: Rogues' Gallery: The Secret History of the Moguls and the Money that Made the Metropolitan Museum
"Mogul", "mogul", "Mongol", "Mongoloid", "mongoloid"
(E?)(L?) http://www.alphadictionary.com/goodword/date/2011/02/02
(E?)(L?) http://www.alphadictionary.com/articles/eponyms/index.html
mogul A very wealthy, powerful businessman. Mogul, a member of the Muslim dynasty of rulers in 16th -17th century India
(E1)(L1) https://www.bartleby.com/81/G2.html
Great Mogul | Mogul Cards
(E?)(L?) http://www.begriffsstudio.de/
1179 der pastariese, der nudelmogul, der teigtycoon
(E2)(L1) http://www.beyars.com/kunstlexikon/lexikon_6051.html
Mogulkunst
Das bekannteste Werk der Mogularchitektur ist der berühmte Grabbau Tadsch Mahal (Edelstein der Gebäude) bei Agra (1632-52) ...
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(E?)(L?) http://www.chemie.de/lexikon/
Großmogul (Diamant) | Mogultechnik
(E?)(L1) http://www.cigarettespedia.com/
Mogul
(E?)(L?) http://codex99.com/archive.html
Whipped Cream & Other Delights ? The Music Mogul & the Supermodel - 1965
(E?)(L?) http://epguides.com/menut/
TV Land Moguls
(E1)(L1) http://etimologias.dechile.net/?mogul
(E?)(L?) http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=mogul
"mogul": powerful person," 1670s, from "Great Mogul", Mongol emperor of India after the conquest of 1520s, from Persian and Arabic "mughal", "mughul", alteration of "Mongol" (q.v.), the Asiatic people.
"mogul": elevation on a ski slope" 1961, probably [Barnhart] from Scandinavian (cf. dialectal Norwegian "mugje", fem. "muga", "a heap", "a mound"), or [OED] from southern German dialect "mugel" in the same sense.
(E?)(L?) http://filmlexikon.uni-kiel.de/
Mogul
(E?)(L?) http://www.flaggenlexikon.de/fbabur.htm
Flagge - Flag:
Flagge des Mogulreiches unter Babur (1526-1530)
Flag of the Mogul Empire under the rule of Babur (1526-1530)
(E?)(L1) http://www.gutenberg.org/browse/authors/t
Tracy, Louis, 1863-1928: The Great Mogul (English) (as Author)
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Peonies: High Mogul
(E?)(L?) http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/channel-search?q=Mogul
(E?)(L?) http://listserv.linguistlist.org/cgi-bin/wa?S2=ADS-L&m=34926&I=-3&q=Antedating+of
04/01/01 00:19 23 Antedating of 'Movie Mogul' (1924)
(E?)(L?) http://www.michas-spielmitmir.de/allespiele.php
Moguli
(E?)(L?) http://www.raetsel-der-menschheit.de/glossar/mogul.htm
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Angehöriger der 1526 - 1858 in Delhi herrschenden islamischen Dynastie mongolischer Abstammung, Gründer des Mogulreichs.
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(E2)(L1) https://www.dictionary.com/browse/mogul
(E2)(L1) https://www.dictionary.com/browse/Mogul
(E?)(L?) http://www.sacklunch.net/placenames/G/GreatMogul.html
Great Mogul
(E?)(L?) http://www.woerterbuchnetz.de/DWB/
groszmogul, m.
(E2)(L1) http://www.kruenitz1.uni-trier.de/cgi-bin/callKruenitz.tcl
Pflaume (Moguls-) | Salat (großer Mogul-)
(E?)(L?) http://woerterbuchnetz.de/RhWB/
Grossmogul
(E?)(L?) http://www.vianney-frain.com/product.php?id_product=635
Mogul Engine tracteur 1914
(E1)(L1) http://www.visualthesaurus.com/landing/?w1=mogul
(E?)(L?) http://www.besserwisserseite.de/orientalisch.phtml
(E?)(L1) http://www.wasistwas.de/
Bewundert und gehasst: Medienmogul Axel Springer
(E?)(L?) http://www.waywordradio.org/?s=Mogul
Search results for "Mogul"
- hero bump
- Posted February 6, 2009 .
- hero bump n.— «And that’s when I hit the moguls, turning my knees hydraulic on Gandy Dancer, a narrow gully of what I call “hero bumps,” perfectly shaped mogul lines on a gradual pitch where I won’t pick up too much speed.» —“What now, a snow recession, too?” by Charles Agar Sky-Hi Daily News (Granby, Colorado) Jan. 21, 2009. [...]
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- whoop de doo
- Posted June 20, 2007 .
- whoop de doo n.— «On the second day, we encountered 29 km of whoop-de-doos. For those unfamiliar with dirt bike vernacular, picture the harshest mogul run you’ve ever seen, lay it out horizontally, throw in some sand and you have whoops. It was amazingly invigorating. Whoops are best approached standing up, with you legs pumping like [...]
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- whoop
- Posted June 20, 2007 .
- whoop n.— «Two weeks ago I listened while Karolyn and Julia talked about the steep downhill and the series of “whoops” at the beginning of the trail. “Whoops” are like moguls in downhill skiing, they are mounds that you ride over—don’t forget you are standing up, not sitting down, absorbing the undulation with your knees.» —by Cecilie [...]
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- metopia
- Posted May 12, 2007 .
- metopia n.— «The vast assets of his fanatical followers allowed him to realize another one of great dreams of the self important, the metopia. Jonestown, Guyana was founded in 1977 after increasing legal pressure in the U.S. drove Jones and his followers from San Francisco. Unfortunately, mounting pressure from interest groups within the United States bridged [...]
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- guap
- Posted April 24, 2007 .
- guap n.— «Late last night I was watching some rap star or hip hop mogul on Carson Daly, and Carson asked him about “new cool urban” words. The guy told him that the new word for “Money” is “Guac” as in short for Guacamole. Some people sometimes refer to this as “Guap.”» —“New Slang” by Amir Blumenfeld BeingFamous.com Apr. 29, [...]
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- data valdez
- Posted August 15, 2006 .
- data valdez n.— «“If we don’t see headlines in a bad way, if we don’t see a ‘data valdez,’ a ‘data spill,’ then we’ll know they’re doing their jobs well,” says David Steer, spokesman for TRUSTe, which certifies the reliability of e-vendors in regard to privacy. “One of the worst things that can happen to an [...]
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- flavor saver
- Posted June 20, 2005 .
- flavor saver n.— «Fred’s belief is that Nature’s Cure will be the vehicle that drives him to become the only movie mogul with a backward hat and a flavor-saver.» —by Colin Devenish Limp Bizkit Oct., 2000.
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- fashion viagra
- Posted April 15, 2005 .
- fashion viagra n.— «Rap mogul Sean “P Diddy’ Combs is launching his new line of Sean John womenswear—and dubbing it “fashion viagra.”» —“P Diddy Label Brings Out The Star In Women” Contactmusic.com Apr. 15, 2005.
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- Orange Curtain
- Posted April 1, 2005 .
- Orange Curtain n.— «Los Angeles County is bigger, glitzier, smoggier, and its meaner streets are statistically more dangerous. The stargazers and the starletss, the baby moguls and the legends, live there, clawing for fame and fortune, at least according to those south of the “Orange Curtain.” Conversely, Orange County residents are deemed priggish, plastic, conservative—even “nerdy” [...]
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- burn-off theater
- Posted February 14, 2005 .
- burn-off theater v.— «Burn-Off Theater…the presentation of shelved losers and leftovers, ie. making use of pilots that didn’t go. Fox president G. Berman: “Summer isn’t just for Burn-Off Theater anymore.”» —“Listening in on the moguls” by Joanne Ostrow Denver Post (Colo.) Feb. 14, 2005.
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(E?)(L?) http://www.wdl.org/en/search/?q=Mogul
- History of the Afghans
- The History of the Afghans, published in English in 1829, is the first history of the Afghan people translated from a non-Western language to appear in a European language. The original work was composed in Persian, in 1609-11, by Neamet Ullah (active 1613-30) in the court of the Mughal emperor Jahangir (1569-1627). Ullah based his work on material compiled by Hybet Khan, an attendant of the Afghan General Khan Jahan Lodi. The translation is by the German philologist and Orientalist Bernhard Dorn (1805-81), who worked from a copy of the ...
- Contributed by: Government College University Lahore
- The Voyage of the Sieur Le Maire, to the Canary Islands, Cape-Verde, Senegal, and Gambia
- This 1745 book is an English translation of a work by Jacques-Joseph Le Maire that was first published in 1695 and recounted a voyage to West Africa and the Atlantic islands off the coast of Africa. Le Maire, a physician in the service of the Compagnie d'Afrique, describes the inhabitants, customs, and places that he visited. Le Maire’s work remains an important source for the study of 17th-century West Africa, interactions between Africans and Europeans, and aspects of the transatlantic slave trade.
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- The History of Genghizcan the Great, First Emperor of the Antient Moguls and Tartars
- This early Western history of Genghis Khan, the 13th-century Mongol Emperor who established the world’s largest contiguous empire, is by François Pétis (1622-95), an interpreter of Arabic and Turkish at the French court. In a long and distinguished career, Pétis translated a history of France into Turkish, compiled a French-Turkish dictionary, and created a catalog of the Turkish and Persian manuscripts owned by the king of France. François Pétis de la Croix (1653-1713), the son of François Pétis, took over the position of interpreter from his father in 1695 ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- A Voyage to the East Indies: Containing Authentic Accounts of the Mogul Government in General, the Viceroyalties of the Decan and Bengal, with Their Several Subordinate Dependencies
- This two-volume work is the third edition of a book first published as a single volume in 1757, expanded to two volumes in 1766, and republished in 1772. The author, John Henry Grose (active 1750-83), was born in England and went to Bombay (present-day Mumbai) in March 1750, to work as a servant and writer for the British East India Company. The book contains Grose’s descriptions of 18th-century India, including his account of the war of 1756-63, in which the British East India Company largely eliminated France as a ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- Afghanistan: A Short Account of Afghanistan, Its History, and Our Dealings with It
- This book is a brief history of Afghanistan and its relations with the British Empire. It was published in London in 1881 as Parliament and the British public were debating policy toward Afghanistan in the aftermath of the Second Anglo-Afghan War, which was fought between 1878 and 1880. The author, Philip Francis Walker, was a London barrister who had recently served with the British army in Afghanistan, and the book contains vivid accounts of fierce fighting with the Afghans. In a typical passage, Walker describes the Afghan tribesmen as “being ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- An Account of the Kingdom of Nepal
- Francis Hamilton Buchanan (1762-1829) was a Scottish-born explorer, naturalist, and physician, employed by the British East India Company in a number of capacities from 1794 to 1815. He conducted surveys of Mysore in 1800 and Bengal in 1807-14. This work, published after his return to Scotland, is based on his 14-month stay in Nepal in 1802-03. Buchanan drew upon his own observations and conversations with hereditary chiefs, Buddhist priests, scribes, and others in an attempt to provide a comprehensive account of the country as he found it before the Anglo-Nepalese ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- Political Missions to Bootan, Comprising the Reports of the Hon'ble Ashley Eden,--1864; Capt. R.B. Pemberton, 1837, 1838, with Dr. W. Griffiths's Journal; and the Account by Baboo Kishen Kant Bose
- Published in Calcutta (present-day Kolkata) in 1865, this volume contains four narratives relating to the interactions in the 19th century between British India and the Kingdom of Bhutan. The first is the report of Sir Ashley Eden (1831-87), a British administrator who, in 1863, was sent on a mission to conclude a treaty of peace and friendship with Bhutan. Eden’s mission failed and was followed by the outbreak of the Anglo-Bhutan War of 1864-65 (also known as the Dooar or Duar War), in which Bhutan was forced ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- A Narrative of the Mission Sent by the Governor-General of India to the Court of Ava in 1855, with Notices of the Country, Government, and People
- In December 1852, at the conclusion of the second Anglo-Burmese War, the British annexed the southern and coastal regions of Burma (known as Lower Burma). Pagan Min, and later his brother Mindon Min, continued to rule Upper Burma. In 1855, Arthur Phayre, the British commissioner for the annexed territories, visited the court of Ava in Upper Burma as part of an effort to improve relations with Mindon. Henry Yule was secretary to Phayre and accompanied him on the mission. This work, written by Yule, is a modified version of the ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- Memoirs of Babur
- This book is a lithograph edition of the Persian translation of Baburnamah (Memoirs of Babur), the autobiography of ?ahir al-Din Mu?ammad Baburshah (1483-1530), the first Mughal emperor of India. Baburnamah originally was written in Chagatai Turkish and was translated into Persian during the reign of the Mughal emperor Akbar. The translation was undertaken by Bairam Khan (died 1561), an Afghan bureaucrat and military commander who served under Emperor Humayun and who was briefly appointed regent over his successor, Emperor Akbar, when Akbar was a child. This book was printed ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- The War of Kabul and Kandahar
- Mu?arabah-'i Kabul va Qandahar (The war of Kabul and Kandahar) is an account of the First Afghan War (1839-42) by Munshi ?Abd al-Karim, an associate of Shah Shuja?, the emir of Afghanistan. Mawlawi Mu?ammad ?Abd al-Karim was an Indo-Persian historian from Lucknow, India, who was active in the mid-19th century. He was a prolific munshi (writer, secretary, and language teacher) and translator. He rendered into Persian from Arabic such works as Tarikh al-Khulafa (History of the Caliphs), by al-Suyuti (1445-1505) and a history of Egypt by Ibn Iyas ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- Chilzina, or the Forty Steps
- This photograph of the Chilzina and the "Forty Steps" is from an album of rare historical photographs depicting people and places associated with the Second Anglo-Afghan War. The Chilzina is a chamber carved from the mountain rock that was part of the old citadel of Kandahar, built by the first Mughal emperor, ?ahir al-Din Mu?ammad Babur (1483-1530), in the early 16th century. Inside the chamber near the summit, reached by forty steps, are Persian inscriptions detailing Babur's conquests in India and elsewhere in Asia. A battle between Amir ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- Journal of a Tour through Part of the Snowy Range of the Himala Mountains, and to the Sources of the Rivers Jumna and Ganges
- James Baillie Fraser (1783-1856) was a Scot who in 1813 went to Kolkata (Calcutta) to join the family firm of Becher and Fraser. He remained there until 1820. In 1815, he accompanied his brother William, who was taking part in the Anglo-Nepalese War of 1814-16, on an expedition into the Garwhal Hills to find the sources of the Jumna and Ganges rivers. James and William Fraser were the first Europeans to reach many of the places they visited, which James vividly described in this account of the journey. He characterized ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- Siberia
- Morgan Philips Price (1885-1973) was a British journalist, photographer, and politician who wrote several books about Russia. He studied science at Cambridge University. In 1910 he joined a British scientific expedition to explore the headwaters of the Enesei River in central Siberia with two friends, writer, photographer, and cartographer Douglas Carruthers, and J.H. Miller, a zoologist and big-game hunter. Siberia is Price’s account of the expedition and his travels on the Trans-Siberian Railroad, his stay in the city of Krasnoiarsk, and his visit to the Siberian provincial ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- The Burmese Empire a Hundred Years Ago, as Described by Father Sangermano, with an Introduction and Notes by John Jardine
- Vincenzo Sangermano (1758-1819) was a Roman Catholic priest, a member of the Barnabite religious order, who served as a missionary in Burma from 1783 to 1806. After initially going to the then-capital city of Ava, he settled in Rangoon, where he completed construction of a church and a college of missionaries. While heading the college, Sangermano undertook pioneering research on the political, legal, and administrative system of the Burmese Empire and on Burmese cosmography, science, religion, and manners and customs. Sangermano based his work on personal observations and inquiries ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- Burma Under British Rule
- Joseph Dautremer was a French scholar specializing in Asian languages who served for a time as the French consul in Rangoon, the capital of British Burma. Burma Under British Rule is a detailed study of Burma, with chapters devoted to the history, people, physical geography, economy, and international trade of the country. A brief concluding chapter deals with the Andaman Islands, where the British maintained a penal colony. Originally published in Paris in 1912, Dautremer’s book was translated from the French into English by Sir (James) George Scott (1851 ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- The History of Persia
- Captain John Stevens (died 1726) was a prolific translator and embellisher of Spanish and Portuguese works of history and literature who published this book in 1715. In his preface, Stevens explained: “Persia is at this time, and has been for several Ages, one of the Great Eastern Monarchies, and yet the Accounts we have hitherto had of it in English have been no better than Fragments.” The book is a translation of a work in Spanish published in 1610 by Pedro Teixeira (erroneously identified by Stevens as Antony), a Portuguese ...
- Contributed by: Library of Congress
- Memoirs of Babur
- Recognized as one of the world’s great autobiographical memoirs, the Baburnamah is the story of Zahir al-Din Muhammad Babur, who was born in 1483 and ruled from the age of 11 until his death in 1530. Babur conquered northern India and established the Mughal Empire (or Timurid-Mughal Empire). Originally from Fergana in Central Asia, Babur descended on his father’s side from Timur (Tamerlaine) and on his mother’s from Chingiz (Ghengis) Khan. Babur wrote his memoir in Chagatai, or Old Turkish, which he called Turkic, and it was ...
- Contributed by: Walters Art Museum
- Emperor Aurangzeb at the Siege of Golconda, 1687
- This gouache painting was created by an unknown Indian artist sometime in the mid-to-late 18th century, but it depicts an earlier event: the siege of the city of Golconde in south-central India by the last great Mughal emperor, Aurangzeb (reigned 1658-1707). Golconde was famous for its fort, palaces, factories, and ingenious water-supply system, as well as the legendary wealth from the city’s diamond mine. Aurangzeb was Sunni, while the rulers of the Deccan were Shia who accepted the suzerainity of the shah of Persia and resisted Mughal expansionism ...
- Contributed by: Brown University Library
- The Drama of Akbar
- Mu?ammad ?usain Azad (also called Ehsan Azad, circa 1834-1910) was a successful Urdu poet and a writer of vivid prose, particularly in his historical writing. He was born in Delhi, where his father, Muhammad Baqir, edited the first Urdu newspaper, Delhi Urdu Akhbar. Muhammad Baqir’s involvement in the Uprising of 1857 (also known as the Sepoy Rebellion) led to his execution by the British. His son moved to Lahore several years later, where he taught Arabic at Government College and was subsequently professor of Urdu and Persian at ...
- Contributed by: Government College University Lahore
(E?)(L1) http://www.wer-zu-wem.de/firma/Federal-Mogul.html
Federal Mogul
(E?)(L?) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_colleges_and_universities_named_after_people
Sarah Lawrence College, New York, USA Sarah Lawrence, wife of William Van Duzer Lawrence The college was founded by New York real-estate mogul William Lawrence and named in honor of his wife.
(E?)(L?) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_eponyms_(L-Z)
Ted Turner, media mogul — Turner Entertainment, Turner Classic Movies, Turner Broadcasting System or TBS, TBS Superstation, WTBS, Turner Network Television or TNT, Turner Tomorrow Fellowship Award, Ted Turner debate (a style of team debate recognized by the National Forensic League; also referred to as Controversy debate)
(E1)(L1) http://www.wordsmith.org/words/mogul.html
(E1)(L1) http://www.wordsmith.org/awad/archives/0302
(E1)(L1) http://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?corpus=8&content=Mogul
Abfrage im Google-Corpus mit 15Mio. eingescannter Bücher von 1500 bis heute.
Dt. "Mogul" taucht in der Literatur um das Jahr 1750 auf.
(E?)(L?) https://corpora.uni-leipzig.de/
Erstellt: 2014-01