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🇦🇪 DUBAI UAE, DEIRA AND NAIF WALK AT NIGHT, DUBAI MORNING WALK, GOLD SOUK, CHEAP PART OF DUBAI, نايف

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🇦🇪 DUBAI UAE, DEIRA AND NAIF WALK AT NIGHT, DUBAI NIGHT WALK, GOLD SOUK, CHEAP PART OF DUBAI, نايف

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🇦🇪 DUBAI UAE, DEIRA AND NAIF WALK AT NIGHT, DUBAI NIGHT WALK, GOLD SOUK, CHEAP PART OF DUBAI, 2022, نايف Naif is a locality in Deira side of Dubai, United Arab Emirates. It is a commercial and residential locality. Considering the nearby localities, Naif is larger in size. It is one of the oldest localities. The residents of this locality are mainly South Asians. Naif has the second-highest population density of all communities in Dubai (after Ayil Nasir) DEIRA – The name of the kingdom is of Brythonic origin, and is derived from the Proto-Celtic *daru, meaning ‘oak’ (derw in modern Welsh), in which case it would mean ‘the people of the Derwent’, a derivation also found in the Latin name for Malton, Derventio.[3] It is cognate with the modern Irish word doire (pronounced [ˈd̪ˠɛɾʲə]); the names for County Londonderry and the city of Derry stem from this word. Brythonic Deira Following the Roman withdrawal from Britain a number of successor kingdoms rose in northern England, reflecting pre-Roman tribal territories. The area between the Humber and River Tees known as Deywr or Deifr corresponds to the tribal lands of the Parisi, bordered to the west and north by the Brythonic kingdoms of Elfed and Bryneich respectively, and to the east by the North Sea. Early Deira may have centred on Petuaria (modern Brough) and archaeological evidence shows that the town was refortified. Petuaria was a great tribal centre for the Parisi, but declined in importance from the mid-fourth century (possibly as the harbour silted up). After this period, Derventio (modern Malton) may have functioned as the region’s capital.[6] It is not known if Deira was ever an independent Brythonic kingdom, and no British king has been identified with the area from the surviving genealogies, poems or chronicles. However the area was subject to the same fractious inheritance traditions and changing power dynamic (following the Roman withdrawal) that allowed Elfed and Bryneich to become independent hereditary kingdoms in the early fifth century. In Welsh literature Deira is part of the Hen Ogledd (Old North) region, which was divided into many related kingdoms after the death of Coel Hen (Coel the Old). Anglian Deira The kingdom was previously inhabited by Britons and was probably created in the third quarter of the fifth century when Anglian warriors invaded the Derwent Valley.[9] Anglian Deira’s territory also extended from the Humber to the Tees, and from the sea to the western edge of the Vale of York. It later merged with the kingdom of Bernicia, its northern neighbour, to form the kingdom of Northumbria. According to Simeon of Durham (writing early in the 12th century), it extended from the Humber to the Tyne, but the land was waste north of the Tees. After the Brythonic kingdom centred on Eboracum, which may have been called Ebrauc, was taken by King Edwin, the city of Eboracum became its capital, and Eoforwic (“boar-place”) was taken by the Angles.[10] Archaeology suggests that the Anglian royal house was in place by the middle of the fifth century, but the first certainly recorded king is Ælla in the late sixth century.[11] After his death, Deira was subject to king Æthelfrith of Bernicia, who united the two kingdoms into Northumbria. Æthelfrith ruled until the accession of Ælla’s son Edwin, in 616 or 617, who also ruled both kingdoms until 633. Osric, the nephew of Edwin, ruled Deira after Edwin, but his son Oswine was put to death by Oswiu in 651. For a few years subsequently, Deira was governed by Æthelwald son of Oswald of Bernicia.