Manat (goddess) - Wikipedia Manāt (Arabic: مناة, pronounced [maˈnaːh] (pausa) or [maˈnaːt], Old Arabic: [manaˈwat]; also transliterated as Manāh) was a pre-Islamic Arabian goddess worshipped in the Arabian Peninsula before the rise of Islam and the Islamic prophet Muhammad in the 6 7th century
Manat: The pre-Islamic Goddess of Time, Fate and Death Manat, sometimes spelled as Manah, is believed to be the first one Allah created, and so the oldest of his daughters The Kitāb al-ʾAṣnām, or The Book of Idols, by Hisham Ibn Al-Kalbi, explains:
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Manāt - Gods and Monsters Explore the enigmatic Arabian goddess of fate, shaping destinies and embodying ancient tribes' hopes and fears
Manāt | Arabian goddess | Britannica Among the Nabataeans, al-ʿUzzā was assimilated to Venus, and Aphrodite and was the consort of Kutbāʾ or al-Aktab (“the Scribe”; Mercury); among the Thamudaeans, however, she was assimilated to ʿAttarsamay (or ʿAttarsam) Manāt was depicted as Nemesis in the Nabataean iconography …
Manat – Arabian Goddess of Time, Destiny and Death One of the Triple Arabian Goddess, Manat, (sometimes Manawat) forms a triad with Al-Uzza and Allat Her name comes from the Arabic word “maniya” which means “fate, destruction, doom, and death”, and from “menata” meaning “part and portion”
Azerbaijani manat - Wikipedia The manat (ISO code: AZN; sign: ₼; abbreviation: m) is the currency of Azerbaijan It is subdivided into 100 gapiks The first iteration of the currency emerged in the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic and its successor, the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic, with the issues happening in 1919–1923