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Muwashshah (Arabic: مُوَشَّح muwaššaḥ
literally means "girdled" in
classical Arabic;
plural muwaššaḥāt موشحات or tawāšīḥ تواشيح) is the name for both an...
- Portuguese:
carja [ˈkaɾʒɐ]; also
known as markaz), is the
final refrain of a
muwashshah (مُوَشَّح 'girdle'), a
lyric genre of al-Andalus (the
Iberian Peninsula...
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Lamma Bada
Yatathanna (Arabic: لما بدا يتثنى) is an
Arabic muwashshah of the
Nahawand maqam. The poem is
considered one of the most
famous Arabic pieces...
- al-Ghaithu (Arabic: جَادَكَ الغَيْثُ "Good Rain
Would Befit You") is an
Arabic muwashshah by Ibn al-Khatib. It was
written as a madīh (مديح "panegyric") of Sultan...
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Western and for
Arabic music. A
typical Syrian classical genre is the
Muwashshah that goes back to
around the 9th or 10th century.
Performed by a lead...
- it
resembles ma'luf or
andalusi nubah, in
Egypt the dur, in
Syria the
muwashshah, and in Iraq the
maqam al-iraqi.
According to the
article about Islamic...
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divided the
Andalusi musical tradition into four types: nashīd, ṣawt,
muwashshaḥ, and zajal. A nashīd was
classical monorhyme poem
consisting of istihlal...
-
poetry called Muwashshah developed in
Andalucia as
early as the 9th
century CE,
which then
spread to
North Africa and the
Middle East.
Muwashshah was typically...
- new Arab literature,
evident in the new
poetic form: the
muwashshah. In the beginning,
muwashshah represented a
variety of
poetic meters and schemes, ending...
- al-Andalus, and
shared important poetic and
literary forms such as zajal, the
muwashshah, and the maqama.
Islamic literature, such as
Quranic exegeses and other...