A ghazi (or gazi ; Arabic: غازي ghāzī [ɣaːˈziː], pl. ghuzāt) is an individual who participated in a ghazwa (غَزْو [ɣazw]) – a military expedition or raid against Infidels. Early Islamic literature characterised as ghazwa the expeditions led by the Islamic prophet Muhammad; later, Turkic military commanders used the word to refer to their wars of conquest.
In the context of the wars between Russia and the Muslim peoples of the Caucasus, starting as early as Sheikh Mansur's resistance to Russian expansion from 1785 to 1791, the word ghazwa usually appears in the form gazavat (Russian: газават).
In English-language literature, the word ghazw often appears as "razzia", a borrowing through French from Maghrebi Arabic.
In modern Turkic languages, such as Turkish and Azerbaijani, the word gazi r...
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Illustrations of Ottoman soldiers
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Chand Bibi hawking on a chestnut stallion. Opaque watercolour. Rajasthan or Mewar style, in Khandesh...
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Mughal Troops Chase the Armies of Da'ud (1574-1575)
After the capture of Patna, Akbar had returned t...
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Usul al-Fiqh - Principles of Islamic jurisprudence