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Troia and Britannica
These were in fact by Thomas Heywood, from his Troia Britannica, which Jaggard had published in 1609.

Troia and Troy
As early as 1911, Giovanni Pastrone's two-reel la Caduta di Troia ( The Fall of Troy ) made a big impression worldwide, and it was followed by even bigger spectacles like Quo Vadis?
La Caduta di Troia ( The Siege of Troy ) ( 1911 )
Troy (, Ilion, or, Ilios ; and, Troia ; Latin: Trōia and Īlium ; Hittite: Wilusa or Truwisa ; Turkish: Truva ) was a city, both factual and legendary, in northwest Anatolia in what is now Turkey, south of the southwest end of the Dardanelles / Hellespont and northwest of Mount Ida.
It was called Troia secunda, the second ; or small Troy.
Brutus then founds a city on the banks of the River Thames, which he calls Troia Nova, or New Troy, siting his palace where is now Guildhall and a temple to Diana on what is now St Paul's ( with the London Stone being a part of the altar at the latter ).
Rosso Canosa Wine, produced with Uva di Troia ( grapes of Troy, also called a variety of Canosa ).
According to Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae ( 1136 ) it was founded by the exiled Trojan Brutus, who called it Troia Nova (" New Troy "), which gradually corrupted to Trinovantum.
Even the Archaic Troy ( Troia ) city, where was governed by Lydians and destroyed by the devastating eathquake in 2500 BC, has ruins in today.
Tiras " desire " ( sons were Benib, Gera, Lupirion and Gilak )-also Tiracian, Thracian, Thirasian, Thuras, Troas, Tros, Troia, Troi, Troy, Trajan, Trojan, Taunrus, Tyrsen, Tyrrhena, Rasenna, Tursha, Tusci, Tuscany, Etruscan.
In 1988 the Turkish government gave him an exclusive excavation license for Troy itself ( which for academic purposes is internationally known as Troia, at his suggestion ).

Troia and ),
Of others in South Italy and Sicily, the following are the finest: in Sant Andrea, Amalfi ( 1060 ); Salerno ( 1099 ); Canosa ( 1111 ); Troia, two doors ( 1119 and 1124 ); Ravello ( 1179 ), by Barisano of Trani, who also made doors for Trani cathedral ; and in Monreale and Pisa cathedrals, by Bonano of Pisa.
Zhifang waiji, with translation ( Italian ), Introduction and commentary by Paolo De Troia, Brescia, Fondazione Civiltà Bresciana / Centro Giulio Aleni, 2009, with a full Map of ten thousand countries ( Wangguo quantu )
* Aika is an ancient name of Troia ( FG ), Italy
Yet when the android comes after the young heroes ( killing Lilith and Troia ), Arsenal briefly reactivates the young female droid and sends her to stop the Superman Android before shutting down again.
Born in Troia ( Province of Foggia, Apulia ), Salandra was brought into the national cabinet upon the fall of the government of Giovanni Giolitti, as the choice of Giolitti himself, who still commanded the support of most Italian parliamentarians.
* Troia ( board game ), a German board game
* Troia ( Final Fantasy IV ), a town in the Japanese video game Final Fantasy IV
* Troia ( FG ), a town and commune in the province of Foggia, in southern Italy
In The New Titans # 55 ( June 1989 ), Donna changes her pseudonym from Wonder Girl to Troia and adopts a new costume incorporating mystical gifts from the Titans of Myth.
Included in this municipality is Troia ( part of Carvalhal parish ), a peninsula between the Atlantic Ocean and the Sado River.
*' Ein Leben fuer Troia-A Life for Troia ' ( Joachim Latacz ), http :// www. uni-tuebingen. de / troia / st / fifteen / sttr15-obituary-Korfmann. pdf

Troia and with
At the outset, he had to reckon with the presence of the powerful antipope Clement III in Rome, but a series of well-attended synods held in Rome, Amalfi, Benevento, and Troia supported him in renewed declarations against simony, Investiture Controversy, clerical marriages, and continued opposition to Emperor Henry IV.
Thus he won her fairly and took her away to Troia, with the full consent of her natural protectors.
The wine are a blend of 65 % Uva di Troia, up to 35 % blend of Montepulciano and Sangiovese with Sangiovese, itself, not to exceed 15 %, and other local red grape varieties allowed up to 5 %.
* Troia website of " Schwäbisches Tagblatt ", February 15, 2002 ; articles appear in the local newspaper in Tübingen with comments by Kolb and Korfmann
The roses include 65-100 % Uva di Troia and / or Bombino Nero with the other red grape varieties filling out the rest.

Troia and from
* Abas, the ancient writer of a work entitled Troia from which Maurus Servius Honoratus ( ad Aen.
Thence Roger moved to Benevento and northern Apulia, where Duke Ranulf, although steadily losing his bases of power, had some German troops plus some 1, 500 knight from the cities of Melfi, Trani, Troia, and Bari, who were " ready to die instead to lead a miserable life.
Category: People from Troia, Apulia
Category: People from Troia, Apulia

Troia and time
Brutus defeats the giants who are the only inhabitants of the island, and establishes his capital, Troia Nova, on the banks of the Thames ; after his time it is renamed London.

Britannica and Great
Chicago, London & Toronto: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., 1952 ( Great Books of the Western World coll .).
Rulers with identical names are organised first alphabetically by country and then by chronology ; thus, Charles III of France precedes Charles I of England, listed in Britannica as the ruler of Great Britain and Ireland.
The 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica called the series of wars the Great Rebellion, while some historians, especially Marxists such as Christopher Hill ( 1912 – 2003 ), have long favoured the term English Revolution.
The Great Man approach to history was most fashionable with professional historians in the 19th century ; a popular work of this school is the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition ( 1911 ) which contains lengthy and detailed biographies about the great men of history, but very few general or social histories.
), Great Books of the Western World, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., Chicago, IL, 1952.
* The Great Books, Encyclopædia Britannica, Plutarch-The Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans ( Dryden translation ), 1952, Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 55-10323
He wrote A Catalogue of Lords Chancellors, Keepers of the Great Seal, Masters of the Rolls and Officers of the Court of Chancery ( 1843 ); the preface to Henry Petrie's Monunienta historica Britannica ( 1848 ); and Descriptive Catalogue of Materiels relating to the History of Great Britain and Ireland ( 3 vols., 1862 – 1871 ).
After the Congress of Vienna, the British Empire emerged as the pre-eminent power, due to its navy and the extent of its territories, which signalled the beginning of the Pax Britannica and of The Great Game between Britain and Russia.
* Copernicus, Nicolaus On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres, in Great Books of the Western World: 16 Ptolemy Copernicus Kepler Encyclopædia Britannica Inc 1952
* Kepler Epitome of Copernican Astronomy ( Bks 4 & 5 ) published in Great Books of the Western World: 16 Ptolemy Copernicus Kepler Encyclopædia Britannica Inc 1952
* Sychophantasy in Economics: A Review of George Gilder's Wealth and Poverty, The Great Ideas Today, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., Chicago: 1982.
It is sometimes called a Watsonian vice-county as vice-counties were introduced for Great Britain, its offshore islands, and the Isle of Man, by Hewett Cottrell Watson who first used them the third volume of his Cybele Britannica published in 1852.
In 1707, having been assisted in his research by fellow Welsh scholar Moses Williams, he published the first volume of Archaeologia Britannica: an Account of the Languages, Histories and Customs of Great Britain, from Travels through Wales, Cornwall, Bas-Bretagne, Ireland and Scotland.
* The Britannica Library of Great American Writing ( 1960 )
* Great Western Shootout ( published by Britannica Software )
Additionally, he served as coeditor of The Great Ideas Today, Chairman of the Board of Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica from 1943 to 1974, and also published extensively under his own name.
Great Books of the Western World is a series of books originally published in the United States in 1952 by Encyclopædia Britannica Inc. to present the Great Books in a single package of 54 volumes.
Republished in volume 16 of the Great Books of the Western World, Chicago, Encyclopædia Britannica, 1952 ; in the series of the same name, published by the Franklin Library, Franklin Center, Philadelphia, 1985 ; in volume 15 of the second edition of the Great Books, Encyclopædia Britannica, 1990 ; and Amherst, N. Y., Prometheus Books, 1995, Great Minds Series — Science, ISBN 1-57392-035-5.

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