Quellen:

    Araber im Sinai:

    1. https://www.scribd.com/document/734783973/Graf-SaracensDefenseArabian-1978-the-Saracens-and-the-Defense-of-the-Arabian-Frontier
    2. https://ballandalus.wordpress.com/2015/04/19/limes-arabicus-and-saracen-foederati-the-roman-byzantine-desert-frontier-in-late-antiquity/

    Name der Grenzen:

    1. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nomes_of_Ancient_Egypt.png

    Oasen-Standorte:

    1. https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Map-showing-the-oasen-in-the-western-desert-of-Egypt-the-Nile-Valley-and-Delta-Source_fig2_342282244

    Araber im Arabischen Nome (vom Ostufer des Nildeltas bis Suez, einschließlich der Stadt Phacusa):

    1. Shahid, Irfan (1984). Rom und die Araber. Harvard-Universität. S. 5, 7, 174. ISBN) 978-0884021155.

    Araber in der Fayyum-Oase (arsionitisches Nome, Stadt Ptloemais-Arabien):

    1. Bouderbala1; Denoix2; Malczycki3, Sobhi1; Sylvie2; Matt3 (2017). Neue Grenzen der arabischen Papyrologie. Glattbutt. ISBN) 978-9004345133.

    Araber in „allen großen Oasen“ (nämlich Bahariya, Farafra, Dakhla und Kharga):

    1. Barnard, Hans; Darkmate, Kim (Hrsg.). Die Geschichte der Völker der östlichen Wüste. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press an der UCLA.

    Von Da_Seashell312

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    7 Kommentare

    1. MarbleAndMirth on

      Crazy to think about the deep history of trade and migration that was already weaving this region together way before the history books typically start the clock

    2. The concept of borders as shown in the diagram between Palestine and Egypt did not exist for a long time in the region. This was a new concept brought on from Colonial occupiers. People move freely and they were simply areas that had particular cultural differences.

    3. Egypt conquest was done with 3,500. It was mostly done by locals revolting on byzantines

    4. Think_Bat_3613 on

      These are beduin (desert) arabs, the Egyptian Arabs we know today are arabised Egyptians. There are still beduins in Egypt

    5. Caranthir-Hondero on

      So first Christians in Egypt not only used to speak Coptic but Arabic too, didn’t they?

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