The word [[Mahmet]] is the Persian form of [[Mohmad]], the Arabian Gnostic name for [[Jesus Patibilis]], which derives from the Hebrew word [[Mahmad]] used to refer to the Temple part of the L-rd as Bridegroom mentioned in Jewish sources.
From 632 until 680 the "Mahmet People" were commanded by the proto-Karaite Alids. We hear of the '''Tayyaye of Mahmet''' Hagarim from Thomas the Presbyter when they were fighting (in alliance with the proto-Karaite Bakr family's khalidKhalid) against the Romans in 634 just 12 miles east of Gaza. In 636, the proto-Karaite Bakr family's Emir accepted the surrender of Yazdegard's Sassanians who assisted him in conquering Syria where they rose in prominence as the Quraysh Hagarim. Meanwhile the proto-Karaite Alids' Ercolian-Pahlavi Hagarim rose in the East to establish their Imamate in Persia. The standard Islamic Narrative places the origin of the Quran under the Bakr's Quraysh Hagarite Uthman while the two factions were still united. Then in 656 a civil war broke out between the Bakrs' Quraysh Hagarim and the Alids' Pahlavi Hagarim. The proto-Karaite Bakr family were conquered by the '''Tayyaye of Mahmet''' Hagarim while the Bakrs' Quraysh Hagarim withdrew to fortify themselves in Syria. In 680 the Quraysh Hagarim of Syria assasinated the Alids of the New Persian Empire giving the proto-Karaite Bakr Family an opportunity to take back control of the Empire again promoting Uthman's Quran until Abdul Malik succeeded in imposing the rule of the Quraysh Hagarim in 692 AD. Abdul Malik decided that it was in his best interest to revise the religion to abolish the importance of the proto-Karaites. A new Qibla in the Hejaz was established. The Quran was revised. Under the rule of the Quraysh, the Persian cavalries were abolished and Messianic Mithraism evolved into Islam as we know it.
The ethnonym "Tayyaye" was pronounced approximately as "Taye" by Afroasiatics and approximately as "Tazik" by Indoeuropeans and "Tashih" in Chinese sources. Soghdian-Manichean sources call them "Tazigan" and consider them to have been a related Gnostic group. Those that later arrived in Romania were called "Tzigane".
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