gabriel

listen to the pronunciation of gabriel
Englisch - Türkisch
{i} Cebrail
(isim) Cebrail
angel gabriel
cebrail
Englisch - Englisch
An angel associated with the revelation of the Qur'an
A male given name
A patronymic surname
An archangel associated with carrying messages from God
An English surname derived from the given name
An angel associated with the revelation of the Quran
in the Bible, an archangel who brings messages from God to people on Earth. In art, Gabriel is often shown blowing a trumpet. According to Christian belief, he was sent by God to tell Mary that she would be the mother of Jesus. In the Muslim religion, Gabriel gave Muhammad the messages from Allah which form the Koran. In the Bible and the Qurn, one of the archangels. In the Bible he was the heavenly messenger sent to explain Daniel's visions; he also revealed to Zechariah the coming birth of John the Baptist and appeared to Mary in the Annunciation to tell her she was to be the mother of Jesus. In Christian tradition it is believed that he will blow the trumpet on Judgment Day. In the Qurn he is known as Jibrl, and Muslims believe that he brought God's revelations to Muhammad. or Gabriel Prosser born 1775, near Richmond, Va. died September 1800, Richmond, Va., U.S. American slave who planned the first slave rebellion in U.S. history. Born to an African-born mother, he grew up as the slave of Thomas H. Prosser. In 1800 the deeply religious Gabriel planned a slave insurrection to create an independent slave state in Virginia with himself as king. Intending to attack Richmond and kill all whites except Frenchmen, Methodists, and Quakers, he assembled 1,000 slaves outside the city on August 30, but a violent rainstorm washed out bridges and scattered the rebels. Before they could reassemble, Gov. James Monroe learned of the plot and ordered out the state militia. Gabriel and 34 others were arrested, tried, and hanged. Gabriel Prosser Gabriel da Costa Andretti Mario Gabriel Biel Gabriel Fahrenheit Daniel Gabriel Fallopius Gabriel Fauré Gabriel Urbain García Márquez Gabriel José Hanotaux Albert Auguste Gabriel Lattre de Tassigny Jean Marie Gabriel de Marcel Gabriel Honoré Mugabe Robert Gabriel Rossetti Dante Gabriel Gabriel Charles Dante Rossetti San Gabriel Mountains Tardieu André Pierre Gabriel Amédée Gabriel Téllez Mirabeau Honoré Gabriel Riqueti count de Honoré Gabriel Riqueti
{i} male first name; family name; one of the four archangels (Bible)
given name, male
A software product that detects the presence of SATAN See also SATAN
The Archangel
(Bible) the archangel who was the messenger of God
champion of God, used as a proper name to designate the angel who was sent to Daniel (8: 16) to explain the vision of the ram and the he-goat, and to communicate the prediction of the seventy weeks (Dan 9: 21-27)
A Virginia slave and blacksmith who orga­nized an attempted assault against Richmond in 1800
The angel Gabriel, an important figure in the Bible, appears first in the Book of Daniel (chapters 8 and 9) as a messenger and revealer In the New Testament he announces the births of John the Baptist and Jesus Christ (Luke 1), and in the Book of Enoch, part of the pseudepigrapha, he is one of the seven archangels who stand close to God Later Christian tradition made him the trumpeter of the Last Judgment A popular figure in art, Gabriel is often pictured appearing to Mary or with trumpet raised In Islam he is Jibril, the principal of many tales, who revealed the Koran to Muhammad ANTHONY J SALSARINI University of Texas at Austin on-line encyclopedia
In the Hebrew angelic hierarchy, one of the seven archangels whose duty it was to convey the Deity's messages Gabriel explained Daniel's visions to him (Dan 8: 15-26; 9: 20-27) and, in the New Testament, announced the births of John the Baptist and Jesus (Luke 1: 5-17; 26-38) The name may mean "person of God" or "God has shown himself mighty "
Gabriel Biel
born 1420, Speyer [Germany] died Dec. 7, 1495, Tübingen, Württemberg German philosopher, economist, and Scholastic theologian. He became professor at the University of Tübingen (1484). His Collectorium circa IV libros sententiarum presented the teachings of William of Ockham; the work influenced followers known as Gabrielistae. His economic theories favoured fair taxation and price control. See also Scholasticism
Gabriel Fallopius
{i} Gabriello Fallopio (1523-1562), Italian physician and anatomist who discovered the Fallopian tubes and other elements of the female reproductive system
Gabriel Fallopius
Italian Gabriello Fallopio born 1523, Modena died Oct. 9, 1562, Padua Italian anatomist. He contributed greatly to knowledge of the ear and reproductive system. His observations of the dissection of cadavers are outlined in Observationes anatomicae (1561). He discovered the fallopian tubes, which connect the ovaries to the uterus, and several major nerves of the head and face. He described the semicircular canals in the ear and named the vagina, placenta, clitoris, palate, and cochlea. He and Andreas Vesalius overturned many of Galen's principles, a development essential to Renaissance medicine
Gabriel Garcia Marquez
{i} (born in 1928) Colombian writer and journalist, author of "One Hundred Years of Solitude", winner of Nobel Prize for literature in 1982
Gabriel Hanotaux
born Nov. 19, 1853, Beaurevoir, France died April 11, 1944, Paris French politician and historian. An archivist in the foreign ministry from 1880, he advanced rapidly and was appointed foreign minister in 1894. He oversaw French colonial expansion in French West Africa, Madagascar, and Tunisia. In 1898 he advocated a strong stand at Fashoda (see Fashoda Incident). He also championed a Franco-Russian alliance. His large body of historical writings centred on early modern institutional history and contemporary diplomatic affairs
Gabriel Marcel
born Dec. 7, 1889, Paris, France died Oct. 8, 1973, Paris French philosopher, dramatist, and critic. His philosophical works explore aspects of human existence (e.g., trust, fidelity, hope, and despair) which had traditionally been dismissed as unamenable to philosophical consideration. His use of phenomenology was independent of the work of Edmund Husserl, considered the founder of the phenomenological movement. Marcel was the first French proponent of existentialism
Albert-Auguste- Gabriel Hanotaux
born Nov. 19, 1853, Beaurevoir, France died April 11, 1944, Paris French politician and historian. An archivist in the foreign ministry from 1880, he advanced rapidly and was appointed foreign minister in 1894. He oversaw French colonial expansion in French West Africa, Madagascar, and Tunisia. In 1898 he advocated a strong stand at Fashoda (see Fashoda Incident). He also championed a Franco-Russian alliance. His large body of historical writings centred on early modern institutional history and contemporary diplomatic affairs
Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit
born May 24, 1686, Gdask, Pol. died Sept. 16, 1736, The Hague, Dutch Republic German physicist and instrument maker. He spent most of his life in the Netherlands, where he devoted himself to the study of physics and the manufacture of precision meteorological instruments. He is best known for inventing a successful alcohol thermometer (1709) and mercury thermometer (1714) and for developing the Fahrenheit temperature scale, setting zero at the freezing point of an equal mixture of ice and salt. He discovered that water can remain liquid below its freezing point and that the boiling point of liquids varies with atmospheric pressure
Dante Gabriel Rossetti
a British artist and poet who helped to start the Pre-Raphaelite movement. His paintings were mostly based on religious subjects or old stories about King Arthur. He was the brother of Christina Georgina Rossetti (1828-82). orig. Gabriel Charles Dante Rossetti born May 12, 1828, London, Eng. died April 9, 1882, Birchington-on-Sea, Kent British painter and poet. Son of Gabriele Rossetti and brother of Christina Rossetti, he trained at the Royal Academy but vacillated between painting and poetry. As an informal pupil of Ford Madox Brown, he absorbed Brown's admiration for the German Nazarenes. In 1848, with several friends, he formed the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, a group of painters treating religious, moral, and medieval subjects in a naturalistic style. Rossetti expanded the Brotherhood's aims by linking poetry, painting, and Social Idealism and by treating "Pre-Raphaelite" as synonymous with a romanticized medieval past. When his oil paintings were severely criticized, he turned to watercolours based on literary works, which he could more easily sell to acquaintances, and became very successful. The group broke up in 1852, but Rossetti revived it in 1856 with Edward Burne-Jones and William Morris. After the death of his long-ailing wife in 1862, possibly by suicide, literary themes gave way to pictures of women, particularly Morris's wife, Jane. His poetry, including the sonnet sequence "The House of Life," was widely admired. He broke with Morris in 1875 over his love for Jane and spent his later years as an alcoholic recluse
George Gabriel Stokes
{i} George Stokes (1819-1903), Irish mathematician and physicist
Jean -Marie-Gabriel de Lattre de Tassigny
born Feb. 2, 1889, Mouilleron-en-Pareds, France died Jan. 11, 1952, Paris French military leader. After service in World War I and later in Morocco, he was promoted to general in 1939. An infantry division commander in World War II, he was imprisoned by the Germans (1940-43), but he escaped to North Africa. In 1944 he led the French army in the Allied landing operations in southern France and in the drive across France into southern Germany and Austria. He represented France at the signing of the German capitulation (1945). In 1950-51 he commanded French troops in the First Indochina War against the Viet Minh. He was made a marshal of France posthumously
Mario Gabriel Andretti
born Feb. 28, 1940, Montona, Italy Italian-born U.S. automobile-racing driver. He became interested in racing in Italy before moving to the U.S. in 1955. His notable wins include the United States Automobile Club (USAC) championship (1965-66, 1969), the Daytona Beach 500 stock-car race (1967), the Sebring Grand Prix (1967, 1970), the Indianapolis 500 (1969), and the Formula I world driving championship (1978). He retired from competition in 1994
Robert Gabriel Mugabe
born Feb. 21, 1924, Kutama, Southern Rhodesia First prime minister (1980-87) and executive president (from 1987) of Zimbabwe. With Joshua Nkomo, Mugabe led a Marxist-inspired guerrilla war that forced the white-dominated government of Ian Smith to accept universal elections, which Mugabe's party, Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), easily won. He formed a coalition government with Nkomo's Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU), but he removed Nkomo in 1982. In 1984 the two parties were merged as ZANU-Patriotic Front, as Mugabe moved to convert Zimbabwe from a parliamentary democracy into a one-party socialist state. His rule was marked by violence and intimidation and by a decreasing tolerance of political opposition
Robert Gabriel Mugabe
Robert Mugabe (born 1924), president of Zimbabwe since 1987 and former prime minister of Zimbabwe (1980-1987)
San Gabriel Mountains
A mountain range of southern California east and northeast of Los Angeles. It rises to 3,074.4 m (10,080 ft) at San Antonio Peak. Segment of the Pacific Coast Ranges, southern California, U.S. Many peaks exceed 9,000 ft (2,700 m); the highest is San Antonio Peak, or Old Baldy, at 10,080 ft (3,072 m). The range also includes Mount Wilson Observatory, northeast of Pasadena. The mountains are largely within the Angeles National Forest
gabriel

    Silbentrennung

    Ga·bri·el

    Türkische aussprache

    geybriıl

    Aussprache

    /ˈgābrēəl/ /ˈɡeɪbriːəl/

    Etymologie

    () From Hebrew גבריאל (Gavrie’l, “man of God”), from גֶּבֶר (géver, “man”) and אֵל (el, “God”).
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