Live: Al-Riyadi vs Sagesse Al Hekmeh Beirut | Live Play By Play Scoreboard Lebanon 2023/2024 Al-Riyadi Beirut Club Sagesse ...
Live: Homenetmen Beirut vs Al-Riyadi | Live Play By Play Scoreboard Lebanon 2023/2024 Al-Riyadi Beirut Club Sagesse Al ...
Live: Beirut Club vs Sagesse Al Hekmeh Beirut | Live Play By Play Scoreboard Lebanon 2023/2024 Al-Riyadi Beirut Club ...
Live: Sagesse Al Hekmeh Beirut vs Antranik Beirut | Live Play By Play Scoreboard Lebanon 2023/2024 Al-Riyadi Beirut Club ...
Live: Beirut Club vs Antonine | Live Play By Play Scoreboard Lebanon 2023/2024 Al-Riyadi Beirut Club Sagesse Al Hekmeh ...
Live: Champville vs Homenetmen Beirut | Live Play By Play Scoreboard Lebanon 2023/2024 Al-Riyadi Beirut Club Sagesse Al ...
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Homenetmen Beirut , lit.โ'Armenian General Athletic Union and Scouts'), or simply Homenetmen, is the basketball department of Homenetmen, a Lebanese-Armenian multi-sports club based in Beirut, Lebanon. The club was established in 1924 in Beirut and is part of the worldwide pan-Armenian Homenetmen association.
Homenetmen Sports Association Beirut , lit.โ'Armenian General Athletic Union (HMฦM)'), or simply Homenetmen, is a football club based in Beirut, Lebanon, that competes in the Lebanese Fourth Division. It is the association football branch of the larger Lebanese-Armenian multi-sports and scouting organisation of the same name.
Mayrouba Club is a basketball team that plays in the Lebanese Basketball League . After winning the Lebanese second division basketball championship in 2015โ16, they were promoted to the LBL for the 2016โ17 season.
Homenetmen Beirut may refer to:
Mayrouba is a village and municipality in the Keserwan District of the Mount Lebanon Governorate in Lebanon. Its average elevation is 1,300 metres (4,300 ft) above sea level and its total land area is 823 hectares.
The Mayroubian is a culture of the Lebanese Stone Age. Archaeological sites of this culture occur in the earliest, cretaceous, sandstone layer at altitudes of over 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) in the districts of Meten, Chouf and Kesrouan.The Mayroubian type of site was first detected by Henri Fleisch, who collected surface finds of flint tools and defined a typological variation particular to "mountain sites".