Mahallah
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A mahallah, mahalla, mahallya, or mohalla (Arabic: محلة maḥalla, Bengali: মহল্লা mahallā, Hindi: मोहल्ला mōhallā, Persian: محله maḥalla, Urdu: محله, Azerbaijani: Məhəllə) is a country subdivision or neighbourhood in parts of the Arab world, Balkans, Western and South Asia and nearby countries.
- El-Mahalla El-Kubra (Egypt)
- μαχαλάς (mahalas), (Greece)
- Mahalla (Bangladesh)
- Махала (Bulgaria)
- Mahalla (Uzbekistan)
- Mahalle (Turkey)
- Mohalla or mahal[1] (Pakistan or India)
- mahala, archaic for "neighbourhood" or "hamlet" in Serbo-Croatian
Notable Mahallahs[edit]
- Mahallah Sargojrah Gharbi, Chakwal, Pakistan
- Mahallah Sargojrah Sharqi, Chakwal, Pakistan
- Mahallah Basti Allah Wali, Chakwal, Pakistan
- Mohalla Sadiqabad, Pakistan
- Shahi Mohalla, Pakistan
- mahallah maxhup
Russia and former Soviet Union[edit]
A mahalla is an Islamic congregation or parish in Russia and a number of countries once part of the Soviet Union. Typically, a mahalla supports a single mosque. An imam is seen as the spiritual head of a mahalla. A mahalla is directly subordinate to a muhtasib and a territorial muhtasibat. [2]
References[edit]
- ^ Couté, Pierre-Daniel; Léger, Jean-Michel (1989). Bénarès (in French and English). Éditions Créaphis. p. 30. ISBN 978-2-907150-09-5.
Le terme [mohalla] apparaît parfois sous la forme de mahal. / The term used interchangeably for mohalla is mahal.
- ^ Allen J. Frank (2001). "Muslim Religious Institutions in Imperial Russia". ISBN 9789004119758.
See also[edit]
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