See also: Misr

English edit

Etymology edit

From Arabic مِصْر (miṣr).

Noun edit

misr (plural amsar)

  1. (chiefly historical) An Arab frontier outpost or garrison town, chiefly in the period of early Islamic expansion.
    • 2010, Fred M Donner, Muhammad and the Believers: At the Origins of Islam, page 137:
      Some of the amsar grew into great cities and eventually became the centers in which a new Islamic culture was elaborated [] .
    • 2013, Aminah Beverly McCloud, Scott W. Hibbard, Laith Saud, editors, An Introduction to Islam in the 21st Century:
      Each misr was divided into quarters that hosted different tribes – not only the fighting men, but also their women and children.
    • 2019, Tim Mackintosh-Smith, Arabs, Yale University Press, page 205:
      The amsar may have been golden, but they were gilded garrisons.