Milaş (Hungarian: Nagynyulas, Nyulas; German: Hasendorf) is a commune in Bistriţa-Năsăud County, Romania. It is composed of six villages: Comlod (Komlód), După Deal (Hegymögött), Ghemeş (Gémestanya), Hirean (Hirántanya), Milaş and Orosfaia (Oroszfája).
Coordinates: 46°49′N 24°26′E / 46.817°N 24.433°E / 46.817; 24.433
Mila is a genus of moths of the Noctuidae family.
Tasbiha Binte Shahid Mila (Bengali: তাসবিয়া বিনতে শহীদ, better known by her stage name Mila Islam) is a Bangladeshi singer. She sings songs in the fusion and folk genres.
Mila completed her HSC from Chittagong Cantonment Public College. After her first marriage, Mila started her music career by singing in local weddings and gae-holuds. At that time she used to live in Chittagong with her then husband, Raj Ahmed, but later she moved to Dhaka to work on her first album.
Mila got her break with "Fele Asha" of her first solo album which was released in 2006. This album was composed by a number of music directors. In 2008,her second solo album, Fuad featuring Mila "Chapter-2" was released. This album was composed by music director Fuad. In 2009, Fuad featuring Mila "Re-defined" was released as Mila's 3rd album which also was composed by Fuad.
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Buri may refer to:
The Burs (Latin Buri, Buredeense, Buridavenses and Greek Βοῦροι) were a Dacian tribe living in Dacia in the 1st and 2nd centuries Common Era, with their capital city at Buridava.
According to Tomaschek, the root bur- is well known with the Dacian Thracian names: i.e. Burus (Thrax), Bουρχέντιος (that is to say Bhūri–Kanta, a Bessian from Thrace), Burebista (the king of Dacians that is maybe from Sanskrit bhūri "abundant, rich" and Iranian vista "possessor" ).
The Dacian tribe Buredeense / Buri is attested by the ninth tabula of Europe of Ptolemy's Geography, Cassius Dio and inscriptions.
Before the battle of Tapae (in the first campaign of Trajan) the Dacian tribe, the Buri, sent Trajan a message to the effect that he should withdraw from Dacia and restore peaceful relations. Their message to him was inscribed on the smooth top of a very large mushroom, in Latin,. This message was unusual enough to become part of a frieze on Trajan's column.
In the 6th century a deed issued by Justinian, dated 530 AD, mentions the Burs:
The Buri were a Germanic tribe mentioned in the Germania of Tacitus, where they initially "close the back" of the Marcomanni and Quadi of Bohemia and Moravia. It is said that their speech and customs were like those of the Suebi. Such a statement implies that the Buri had recently come from the direction of the Baltic Sea, as other Germanic settlers in Bohemia and Moravia were newcomers, having driven out the Celtic Boii and taken their lands. In Tacitus, the Buri are not linked to the Lugii.
Ptolemy, however, mentions the Lougoi Bouroi (transliterated by the scholars into Latin Lugi Buri) dwelling in what is today southern Poland between the Elbe, the modern Sudetes, and the upper Vistula. They are distinct from the Silingi (Vandals), who are on the upper Oder. Tacitus and Ptolemy together imply that the Buri may have entered Moravia from Suebia with the Marcomanni and Quadi and then moved into the upper Vistula region, where they allied themselves with the Lugii there.
The fate of the Buri seems tied to that of the Danubian tribes, as they joined the Marcomanni-inspired invasion of the empire in the 2nd century AD, going against the emperor, Marcus Aurelius (Julius Capitolinus, Life of Marcus Aurelius). The latter became a tougher adversary than the Germans had suspected and so many tribes, including the Buri, made a separate peace. They were well rewarded by the Romans for doing so, but they then had to face the vengeance of their old allies (Cassius Dio, Books 72-73).