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Ravenna and ",
It was then part of the Byzantine Exarchate of Ravenna ( changing name to Chrysopolis, " Golden City ", probably due to the presence of the imperial treasury ) and, from 569, of the Lombard Kingdom of Italy.
* Novella Maioriani 1, De ortu imperii domini Majoriani Augusti, " The Beginning of the Reign of Our Lord Majorian Augustus ", opening speech of his reign, addressed to the Roman Senate ( given in Ravenna, on January 11, 458 );
* Novella Maioriani 3, De defensoribus civitatum, " The Defenders of the Municipalities ", on the office of defensor civitatum ( given in Ravenna, on May 8, 458, also in the name of Leo I );
* Novella Maioriani 4, De aedificiis pubblicis, " Public Buildings ", on the preservation of the monuments of Rome ( given in Ravenna, on July 11, 458, to Aemilianus, praefectus urbi of Rome, also in the name of Leo I );
The chapel's domed octagon design was influenced by Byzantine models such as the Basilica of San Vitale in Ravenna, the Church of Sergius and Bacchus in Constantinople, and perhaps the Chrysotriklinos, or " golden reception hall ", of the Great Palace of Constantinople.
Though under the suzerainty of Byzantium, Gaeta had then, like nearby ports Naples and Amalfi, a republican form of government with a dux (" duke ", or commanding lord under the command of the Byzantine Exarch of Ravenna ), as a strong bulwark against Saracen invasion.
When the Tok ' ra base on Ravenna comes under attack by Anubis ' minion Zipacna in " Last Stand ", Re ' nal is killed by falling debris.
* Wilma referenced " Calvary Cemetery ", Historylink Metropedia Library ( www. Historylink. org ); " Ravenna Post Office ", Historylink Timeline Library ( www. Historylink. org ); " City of Seattle Annexes Town of Ravenna ", Ibid.
; " Methodists Form Congregation in Ravenna Neighborhood ", Ibid.
; " University District ", Historylink Magic Lantern Library ( www. Historylink. org ); Keming Kuo, " Beautiful Trees Cut To ' Line Someone's Pocket '", The Seattle Times, 29 June 1977 ; " Removal of Trees Protested ", Ibid., 23 November 1926 ; " Removal of Giant Trees Would Be Crime ", Ibid., 4 November 1926 ; " Roosevelt Park Again Ravenna ", ibid., 29 May 1931 ; " Sears To Close Roosevelt Store ", > Ibid., 1 November 1979 ; Shareen Singh, " Area's Metaphysical Bent Is Well Known ", Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 12 September 1998, Neighbors ( project 1996-2000 ); Margaret Pitcairn Strachan, " Roosevelt-Ravenna Are Bustling Areas ", The Seattle Sunday Times, 7 July 1946, p. 5 ; Seattle School Histories, 1869-1974 ed.
The 1962 form of the Confiteor is found in the fourteenth-century " Ordo Romanus XIV " with only a slight modification: " Quia peccavi nimis cogitatione, delectatione, consensu, verbo et opere ", and is found word for word in a decree of the Third Council of Ravenna ( 1314 ).
The name Loch Mhabain is possibly a corruption of Loch Mhaol Bheinn (" Lake on the bare mountain "), or may mean " Loch of Mabon ", an ancient Brythonic god, as the Roman name of the area was Locus Maponi, according to the Ravenna Cosmography.
Strabo wrote that " Altinum too is in a marsh, for the portion it occupies is similar to that of Ravenna ", a waterlogged city whose canals were flushed by the tides: " These cities, then, are for the most part surrounded by the marshes, and hence subject to inundations.

Ravenna and poem
* Oscar Wilde wrote a poem entitled " Ravenna " in 1878.
* Russian Symbolist poet Alexander Blok wrote a poem entitled Ravenna ( May – June 1909 ) inspired by his Italian journey ( spring 1909 ).
Eliot's poem " Lune de Miel " ( written in French ) describes a honeymooning couple from Indiana sleeping not far from the ancient Basilica of Sant ' Apollinare in Classe, ( just outside Ravenna ), famous for the carved capitals of its columns, which depict acanthus leaves buffeted by the wind, unlike the leaves in repose on similar columns elsewhere.
Here he began his career as a writer, winning the Newdigate Prize for his poem Ravenna.
According to the old English Deor poem from the 10th century, Theodoric ruled the " castle of the Mærings " ( Ravenna ) for thirty years.

Ravenna and by
Honorius, however, refused to see beyond his own safety, guaranteed by the dikes and marshes of Ravenna.
* 1512 – War of the League of Cambrai: French forces led by Gaston de Foix win the Battle of Ravenna.
Later, Bruno entered a monastery near Ravenna, founded by Otto, and underwent severe ascetic training under the guidance of St. Romuald.
At first Honorius based his capital in Mediolanum, but when the Visigoths under King Alaric I entered Italy in 401 he moved his capital to the coastal city of Ravenna, which was protected by a ring of marshes and strong fortifications.
The alienation of possessions of the exarchate of Ravenna is condemned, and the Ordinaries made by the intruders are invalid.
The alienation that has been made especially by Otto, Guido, Jerome, and perhaps by Philip of possessions of the exarchate of Ravenna, we condemn.
This was followed by the submission of the Montefeltro of Urbino and the da Polenta of Ravenna, and of the cities of Senigallia and Ancona.
The struggle was accompanied by an armed outbreak in the exarchate of Ravenna in 727, which Leo finally endeavoured to subdue by means of a large fleet.
But the destruction of the armament by a storm decided the issue against him ; his southern Italian subjects successfully defied his religious edicts, and the Exarchate of Ravenna became effectively detached from the Empire.
The Byzantines managed to retain control of the area of Ravenna and Rome, linked by a thin corridor running through Perugia.
Alboin was murdered in 572 in Verona by a plot led by his wife, Rosamund, who later fled to Ravenna.
Liutprand's successor Aistulf conquered Ravenna for the Lombards for the first time, but was subsequently defeated by the king of the Franks Pippin III, called by the Pope, and had to leave it.
In the Ravenna Document of 13 October 2007, theologians chosen by the Roman Catholic and the Eastern Orthodox Churches stated: " 41.
Gregory's successors were largely dominated by the Exarch of Ravenna, the Byzantine emperor's representative in Italy.
Popes had galled the emperors by siding with the king of the Franks, crowning a rival Roman emperor, appropriating the Exarchate of Ravenna, and driving into Greek Italy.
By one of Athalaric's own additions to the decree, it was decided that if a disputed election was carried before the Gothic officials of Ravenna by the Roman clergy and people, three thousand solidi would have to be paid into court.
Before his consecration, Italy was disturbed by the rebellion of the eunuch Eleutherius, Exarch of Ravenna.
He was elected pope by popular acclamation on 11 February 731, but was not formally consecrated as Bishop of Rome until 18 March after receiving the approval of the Byzantine exarch in Ravenna.
He also refortified Centumcellae, and purchased off Thrasimund II of Spoleto the fortress of Gallese along the Via Flaminia, which had been taken by the Lombards, interrupting Rome ’ s communications with the exarch at Ravenna.
Before they reached the city, however, the remains were seized by some citizens of Ravenna and buried there in the Church of Santa Maria Rotonda, the burial place of Theodoric the Great.
Created by law in 1988, it is managed by a consortium, the Consorzio per la gestione de Parco, to which Ferrara and Ravenna provinces belong as well as nine comuni: Comacchio, Argenta, Ostellato, Goro, Mesola, Codigoro, Ravenna, Alfonsine, and Cervia.

Ravenna and Oscar
by Enzo Ravenna, MONDADORI Oscar Classici Greci e Latini, 1984, Italy, with the original text to face, pp. 415, ISBN 978-88-04-38729-9

", and poem
During these visits Shelley wrote the poem " Mont Blanc ", Byron wrote " The Prisoner of Chillon " and the dramatic poem Manfred, and Mary Shelley, who found the scenery overwhelming, conceived the idea for the novel Frankenstein in her villa on the shores of Lake Geneva in the midst of a thunderstorm.
The epigraph at the beginning of the poem is the phrase Vicisti, Galilaee, Latin for " You have conquered, O Galilean ", the apocryphal dying words of the Emperor Julian.
* In his poem " Inniskeen Road: July Evening ", the poet Patrick Kavanagh likens his loneliness on the road to that of Selkirk:
Anne expressed her grief for his death in her poem " I will not mourn thee, lovely one ", in which she called him " our darling ".
He wrote the first important symphonic work in Chilean tradition, " La Muerte de Alcino ", a symphonic poem inspired by the novel of Pedro Prado.
A poem of Callimachus to the goddess " who amuses herself on mountains with archery " imagines some charming vignettes: according to Callimachus, at three years old, Artemis, while sitting on the knee of her father, Zeus, asked him to grant her six wishes: to remain always a virgin ; to have many names to set her apart from her brother Apollo ; to be the Phaesporia or Light Bringer ; to have a bow and arrow and a knee-length tunic so that she could hunt ; to have sixty " daughters of Okeanos ", all nine years of age, to be her choir ; and for twenty Amnisides Nymphs as handmaidens to watch her dogs and bow while she rested.
Tim Blake ( synthesiser player on Planet Gong ) produced a solo album called " Blake's New Jerusalem ", including a 20 minute track with lyrics from Blake's poem.
In the poem the prisoner is suffering " for the colour of his hair ", a natural, given attribute which, in a clearly coded reference to homosexuality, is reviled as " nameless and abominable " ( recalling the legal phrase peccatum horribile, inter christianos non nominandum, " the horrible sin, not to be named amongst Christians ").
The 2009 novel Blood's a Rover by James Ellroy takes its title from Housman's poem " Reveille ", and a line from Housman's poem XVI " How Clear, How Lovely Bright ", was used for the title of the last Inspector Morse book The Remorseful Day by Colin Dexter.
They were taken from the " Ode to Joy ", a poem written by Friedrich Schiller in 1785 and revised in 1803, with additions made by the composer.
The title of Schiller's poem < em lang =" de ">" An die Freude "</ em > is literally translated as " To Joy ", but is normally called the " Ode to Joy ".
The poem also begins in medias res (" into the middle of affairs ") or simply, " in the middle ", which is a characteristic of the epics of antiquity.
The contents are correspondingly varied: a confession of sin and a plea to God not to maintain his anger forever ( ch. 63: 7 – 64: 11 ); a poem on the theme that God has no need of a temple because Heaven is his throne and Earth his footstool ( Isaiah 66: 1 – 2 ); verses setting out conditions for admission to the community ; complaints of sin, incompetence and paganism ; and distinctions between the " righteous " and the " sinners ", foreshadowing the categories used in much later Judaism and early Christianity.
Scholars agree that the introductory and concluding sections of the book, the framing devices, were composed to set the central poem into a prose " folk-book ", as the compilers of the Jewish Encyclopedia expressed it.
They are of two kinds: the " parallel texts ", which are parallel developments of the corresponding passages in the base text, and the speeches of Elihu ( Chapters 32-37 ), which consist of a polemic against the ideas expressed elsewhere in the poem, and so are claimed to be interpretive interpolations.
According to one theory, the term was loaned to Russian, where-in literary language-it first appeared in " Elysei ", a 1771 poem by V. Maikov.
Balalaika appeared in " Elysei ", a 1771 poem by V. Maikov.
* " Balance ", a poem by Patti Smith from her book kodak
The poem was originally published anonymously ( under the pen name " Phin ", based on Thayer's college nickname, " Phineas ").
During this trip, he further conceived the character of Conan and also wrote the poem " Cimmeria ", much of which echoes specific passages in Plutarch's Lives.
In Jonathan Swift's poem: " The Progress of Beauty ", as goddess of the moon, Diana is used in comparison to the 17th / early 18th century everyday woman Swift satirically writes about.

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