Skip to content
Category

Gog and Magog

page 1
Al-Kahf
thumb|upright=1.25|Surah Al-Kahf copied by Ottoman Empire|Ottoman calligrapher Kadı Mahmud Efendi (d. 1575). [[Muhaqqaq, thuluth and reqa script. Sakıp Sabancı Museum]] upright=1.25|thumb|Central illumination of the Royal Terengganu Quran dated 1871. According to Malay tradition Al-Kahf verse 19 is accepted as the centre word of the Quran and Malay Qurans are often decorated in this place. [[Islamic Arts Museum Malaysia]]
Al-Anbiya
thumb|Folio from Samarkand Kufic Quran with surah Al-Anbiya. Late 8th–early 9th century. [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]
Gog and Magog
pair of individuals, peoples, or lands in the Bible and the Qur'an
Gates of Alexander
strategic pass or passes used by Alexander the Great
Guildhall
building in the City of London, England, UK
Magog
Son of Japheth in Genesis 10, and people descended from him
Red Jews
in German legends, a Jewish nation that would invade Europe during the tribulations leading to the end of the world
Nemed
thumb|"Tuan watches Nemed", an illustration of Tuan mac Cairill|Tuán watching the Nemedians arriving in Ireland, by Stephen Reid in T. W. Rolleston's Myths & Legends of the Celtic Race, 1911 Nemed or Nimeth () is a character in medieval Irish legend. According to the Lebor Gabála Érenn (compiled in the 11th century), he was the leader of the third group of people to settle in Ireland: the Muintir Nemid (or Muintir Neimhidh, "people of Nemed"), Clann Nemid (Clann Neimhidh, "offspring of Nemed") or "Nemedians". They arrived thirty years after the Muintir Partholóin, their predecessors, had died
Gaut
Gaut (, from a Proto-Germanic *Gautaz) is an early Germanic name which represents a mythical ancestor or national god in the origin myth of the Geats.
Gogmagog
giant in Welsh and English mythology
Corineus
Corineus, in medieval British legend, was a prodigious warrior, a fighter of giants, and the eponymous founder of Cornwall.
Historia de omnibus Gothorum Sueonumque regibus
book by Johannes Magnus