Aima khan biography of williams
•
Archive
04.09.21Visual ArtRahel AimaRayyane Tabet10.05.18Visual ArtRahel AimaChitra Ganesh02.21.25PhotographyMargaret SundellIrving Penn: Kinship02.21.25FilmMelissa AndersonCompensation02.21.25Visual ArtAlex KitnickFred Lonidier02.21.25NonfictionBrian DillonBye Bye inom Love You02.14.25Visual ArtAruna D’SouzaAmerican Artist02.14.25FilmMoze HalperinUniversal Language02.14.25Visual ArtAlbert MobilioBoris Mikhailov02.14.25LiteratureAnia SzremskiSun City02.07.25NonfictionHanif AbdurraqibBlack in Blues02.07.25NonfictionSasha Frere-JonesThe World After Gaza02.07.25FilmAndrew ChanFrederick Wiseman02.07.25Visual ArtEmily LaBargeGregg Bordowitz: There: a Feeling01.31.25Visual ArtPamela SneedBarkley L. Hendricks01.31.25In MemoriamBeatrice LoayzaDavid Lynch01.31.25LiteratureBrian DillonGliff01.31.25Hip-HopHarmony HolidayMIKE01.24.25PoetrySukhdev SandhuThe Wickedest01.24.25Visual ArtJace ClaytonMeriem Bennani01.24.25NonfictionSasha ArchibaldThe Loves of My Life01.24.25FilmMelissa AndersonPresence
•
Jhelum
City in Punjab, Pakistan
For other uses, see Jhelum (disambiguation).
For the district, see Jhelum District.
City in Punjab, Pakistan
Jhelum (; جِہْلَم; Urdu:[d͡ʒeɦˈləm]) is a city, located along the western bank of the Jhelum River, in Punjab, Pakistan. It is the 21st largest city in Punjab and 31st largest in Pakistan, by population. Located in northern Punjab, it serves as the capital of the eponymous district, it is often referred to as the City of Soldiers or Land of Martyrs and Warriors, due to the city providing many soldiers in the British Indian Army and, later, the Pakistan Armed Forces; owing to the categorisation of the Punjabi tribes as a 'martial race'.[4][5]
Jhelum is a few miles upstream from the site of the ancient Battle of the Hydaspes, between the armies of Alexander III of Macedon and Porus. The site of the modern city of Jhelum could have, possibly, been the capital of Porus' Kingdom, Paurava. A city called Bucep
•
Abstract
All ancient nations hinged their beliefs about hema (blood) on their religious dogmas as related to mythology or the origins of religion. The Hellenes (Greeks) especially have always known hema as the well-known red fluid of the human body. Greek scientific considerations about blood date from Homeric times. The ancient Greeks considered hema as synonymous with life. In Greek myths and historical works, one finds the first references to the uninterrupted vascular circulation of blood, the differences between venous and arterial blood, and the bone marrow as the site of blood production. The Greeks also speculated about mechanisms of blood coagulation and the use of blood transfusion to save life.
“…Iητρική, δεπάνταπάλαιυπάρχει, καί αρχήκαί oδόςευρημένη,
καθ'ήνκαί τάευρημέναπoλλάτεκαί καλώςέχoνταεύρηταιενπoλλώ, χρόνω,
καί τάλoιπάευρεθήσεται, ήντίςικανόςτεώνκαί τάευρημέναειδώ