Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Abensberg" ¶ 14
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Aventinus and name
Most Roman sources trace the name of the hill to a legendary king Aventinus.
Aventinus is the Latinized name of his birthplace, Abensberg.

Aventinus and was
The phrase enkyklios paideia ( ἐγκύκλιος παιδεία ) was used by Plutarch and the Latin word Enciclopedia came from him. The first work titled in this way was the Encyclopedia orbisque doctrinarum, hoc est omnium artium, scientiarum, ipsius philosophiae index ac divisio written by Johannes Aventinus in 1517.
The hill, he says, was named after the first, Italic Aventinus or after the birds ( aves ) of ill omen that " rising from the Tiber " nested there.
He cites and rejects Varro's proposition that the Sabines named the hill after the nearby Aventus river ; likewise, he believes, the Aventinus fathered by Hercules on Rhea Silvia was likely named after the Aventine hill, not vice versa.
The Bavarian historian Johannes Aventinus will write in the 16th century that in 805 the Bratislava Castle was repaired during the reign of its lord, Prince Vratislav, on the place of the ruins of an old Roman settlement allegedly called Pisonium, and was named Wratisslaburgium ; if this is true, Prince Vratislav is, after Samo, only the second Slavic historical figure known from the Middle Danube region.
Later historians ( e. g. Johannes Aventinus ) managed to furnish numerous further details, including the assertion by James Anderson that this Tuiscon was in fact none other than the biblical Ashkenaz, son of Gomer.
Johann Georg Turmair ( Thurmayr ) or Johannes Aventinus ( July 4, 1477 – January 9, 1534 ) was a Bavarian humanist historian and philologist.
Aventinus, who has been called the " Bavarian Herodotus ," wrote other books of lesser importance, and a complete edition of his works was published at Munich ( 1881 – 1886 ).
The German historian Johannes Aventinus disputed that Trebeta ( whom he called Trever or Treiber ) was the son of Ninus, claiming that he was in fact a son of Ninus ' contemporary Mannus, who was supposedly the second king of Germany.
The Swede Johannes Magnus around the same time as Aventinus, wrote that Gothus or Gethar, also known as Gogus or Gog, was one of Magog's sons, who became first king of the Goths ( Geats ) in Gothaland.
In addition, Tuiscon, whom Pseudo-Berossus calls the fourth son of Noah, and says ruled first in Germany / Scythia, was identified by later historians ( e. g. Johannes Aventinus ) as none other than Ashkenaz, Gomer's son.
In 2010, a new research reading room was opened, focusing on Historical Sciences and Bavarian History and Culture ( Aventinus Reading Room ).

Aventinus and is
Johannes Aventinus ( 1477 – 1534 ) is the city's most famous son, the founder of the study of history in Bavaria.
The Aventine hill ( in Latin, Collis Aventinus ) is the southernmost of Rome's seven hills.
An example of this style is Aventinus, made by the G. Schneider & Sohn brewery in Kelheim, Germany.

Aventinus and Johann
# Johannes Aventinus ( Johann Georg Turmair ) – Bavarian scholar and historian.

Aventinus and Johannes
* Johannes Aventinus ( 1477 – 1534 ): Bavarian historian
* January 9 – Johannes Aventinus, Bavarian historian and philologist ( b. 1477 )
* July 4 – Johannes Aventinus, Bavarian historian and philologist ( d. 1534 )
In the early 16th century, German chronicler Johannes Aventinus placed him in the reign of Ingaevone, in ca.
A legend recorded by Johannes Aventinus ( fl.
Among its most famous instructors in the late 15th century were the poet Conrad Celtes, the Hebrew scholar Johannes Reuchlin, and the Bavarian historian Johannes Thurmair ( also known as " Johannes Aventinus ").
This sparked interest among German humanists, including Conrad Celtes, Johannes Aventinus, and Ulrich von Hutten.
Johannes Aventinus ( c. 1525 ) even ascribed them to the mythical progenitor Tuisto, claiming the Greeks had really stolen the idea from them, and not the Phoenicians.
* Johannes Aventinus, Bavarian historian and philologist
Johannes Aventinus
Possibly from this weapon arose an attribution of the invention of the battle-axe to the Amazons by medieval and Renaissance authors ( e. g. Johannes Aventinus ), and a ( modern ) association of the Amazons with the Labrys.
The German chronicler Johannes Aventinus ( ca.

Aventinus and Latin
* Aventine Hill ( Latin, Aventinus ; Italian, Aventino )
Aventinus retained this position until 1517, wrote a Latin grammar ( Rudimenta grammaticae latinae ; 1512 ) and other manuals for the use of his pupils, and in 1515 travelled in Italy with Ernest.

Aventinus and wrote
Aventinus wrote Annals of Bavaria, a valuable record of the early history of Germany.

Aventinus and Bavaria
* Aventinus ( beer ), a wheat doppelbock brewed by G. Schneider & Sohn, in Bavaria, Germany

Aventinus and history
This collection and the collection of the Heimatverein ( local history society ) were united in 1963 into the Aventinus Museum, in the cloister of the former Carmelite monastery.
In his Chronik, Aventinus fabricated a succession of Teutonic kings stretching back to the Great Flood, ruling over vast swathes of Germany and surrounding regions until the 1st century BC, and involving themselves in numerous events from Biblical and Classical history.

Aventinus and on
The Bavarian antiquarian Aventinus ( c. 1530 ) implied it to be Epirus, on the Balkan Adriatic coast.

Aventinus and .
The Augustan reforms of Rome's urban neighbourhoods ( vici ) recognised the ancient road between the two heights ( the modern Viale Aventino ) as a common boundary between the new Regio XIII, which absorbed Aventinus Maior, and the part of Regio XII known as Aventinus Minor.

whose and name
At this time Miriam Noel appeared, urging on Constable Henry Pengally, whose name showed him to be a descendant of the Welsh settlers in the neighborhood.
Under Fosdick the first executive officer of the CTCA was Richard Byrd, whose name in later years was to become synonymous with activities at the polar antipodes.
Much more important is to grasp the feelings of the narrator ( whose full name is never given ) as he becomes aware of the disorganized and bewildered mass of French prisoners clustered together in a temporary prison camp in and around the cathedral of Chartres.
For example, when the film is only four minutes old, Neitzbohr refers to a small, Victorian piano stool as `` Wilhelmina '', and we are thereupon subjected to a flashback that informs us that this very piano stool was once used by an epileptic governess whose name, of course, was Doris ( the English equivalent, when passed through middle-Gaelic derivations, of Wilhelmina ).
She teamed up with another beauty, whose name has been lost to history, and commenced with some fiddling that would have made Nero envious.
So, after the sitting has been held, several readings at one time are mailed, and the distant sitter ( whose name or whose communicator's name was given to the medium ) must mark each little item as Correct ( Hit ), Incorrect ( Miss ), Doubtful, or Especially Significant ( applying to him and, he feels, not to anyone else ).
Second, they believed it important to determine the fate of the captain -- a man whose name is permanently stamped on our maps, on American towns and counties, on a great American river, and on half a million square miles of Arctic seas.
It was Porter, however, who produced the very first movie whose name has lived on through the half century of film history that has since ensued.
BAM is the unlikely name of a French recording company whose full label is Editions De La boite A Musique.
Aristotle, whose name means " the best purpose ," was born in Stageira, Chalcidice, in 384 BC, about east of modern-day Thessaloniki.
Alaksandu could be Paris-Alexander of Ilion ", whose name is Greek.
* John Dobson ( 1915 ), whose name is associated with the Dobsonian telescope, a simplified design for Newtonian reflecting telescopes.
The writer, whose name is revealed as F. Alexander, shelters Alex and questions him about the conditioning.
Another possibility, raised in an essay by the Swedish fantasy writer and editor Rickard Berghorn, is that the name Alhazred was influenced by references to two historical authors whose names were Latinized as Alhazen: Alhazen ben Josef, who translated Ptolemy into Arabic ; and Abu ' Ali al-Hasan ibn al-Haytham, who wrote about optics, mathematics and physics.
The Greek name for amber was ( elektron ), " formed by the sun ", and it was connected to the sun god ( Helios ), one of whose titles was Elector or the Awakener.
The High King of the Elves in the West was Ingwë, an echo of the name Yngvi often found as a name for Frey, whose abode was in Álfheim according to the Grímnismál.
A cadastral survey seems also to have been instituted, and one of the documents relating to it states that a certain Uru-Malik, whose name appears to indicate his Canaanite origin, was governor of the land of the Amorites, or Amurru as the semi-nomadic people of Syria and Canaan were called in Akkadian.
Who the Mormaer or King was at this time is not known, it may have been Óengus of Moray or his father, whose name is not known.

1.037 seconds.