Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Menton" ¶ 2
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Roman and times
But beginning, for all practical purposes, with Frederick Seebohm's English Village Community scholars have had to reckon with a theory involving institutional and agrarian continuity between Roman and Anglo-Saxon times which is completely at odds with the reigning concept of the Anglo-Saxon invasions.
Despite popular opinion, Limbo, which was elaborated upon by theologians beginning in the Middle Ages, never entered into the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church, yet, at times, the church incorporated the theory in its ordinary belief.
Principles of acoustics were applied since ancient times: Roman theatre ( structure ) | Roman theatre in the city of Amman.
No larger settlements, however, have been found to have existed in this remote rural area, located at least 15 km from the nearest road even in Roman times, up to the early medieval period when the place is mentioned as a king's mansion for the first time, not long before Charlemagne became ruler of the Germanic Franks.
Since Roman times, the hot springs at Aachen have been channelled into baths.
After Roman times, Einhard mentions that in 765 – 6 Pippin the Younger spent both Christmas and Easter at Aquis villa (""), which must have been sufficiently equipped to support the royal household for several months.
Alexis was known in Roman times ; Aulus Gellius noted that Alexis ' poetry was used by Roman comedians, including Turpilius and possibly Plautus.
Its political importance now ended, but its temple of Adonis and Aphrodite Amathusia remained famous in Roman times.
In Roman times, a main route ran south from the Baltic coast in through the land of the Boii ( modern Czech Republic and Slovakia ) to the head of the Adriatic Sea ( modern Gulf of Venice ).
He was a Latin philosopher and theologian from the Africa Province of the Roman Empire and is generally considered as one of the greatest Christian thinkers of all times.
Other monuments that have left almost nothing visible to the present day are the Chalkotheke, the Pandroseion, Pandion's sanctuary, Athena's altar, Zeus Polieus's sanctuary and, from Roman times, the circular temple of Augustus and Rome.
Certain high church services and other musical events in liturgical churches ( such as the Roman Catholic Mass and the Lutheran Divine Service ) may be a cappella, a practice remaining from apostolic times.
In 1976 divers in the Aar found part of a seven-meter wide wooden bridge from the late Roman times.
" With some of the clans of the Bisharin and possibly the Hadendoa, they represent the Blemmyes of classic geographers, and their location today is almost identical with that assigned them in Roman times.
Among the most exciting recent archaeological discoveries in Greece is the recognition that the sanctuary site near the modern village of Kalapodi is not only the site of the oracle of Apollon at Abai but that it was in constant use for cult practices from early Mycenaean times to the Roman period.
The first references in the western historical tradition begin at Syracuse in 399 BC and these devices were widely employed by the Roman Legions in Republican times well before the Christian era.
The dominant method of identifying Roman years in Roman times was to name the two consuls who held office that year.
As the chief port of north-west Asia Minor, the place prospered greatly in Roman times, becoming a " free and autonomous city " as early as 188 BC, and the existing remains sufficiently attest its former importance.
In Roman times, it was a significant port for travelling between Anatolia and Europe.
The history of the city dates back to Roman times.
Bursa's thermal baths have been used for therapeutical purposes since Roman times.
Chapters 2 and 7 have generally-though not exclusively-been interpreted as extending to Roman times.

Roman and via
There may also be a connection with the Roman god of war Mars, via hypothetical Proto-Indo-European * M ̥ rēs ; compare Ancient Greek μάρναμαι ( marnamai ), " to fight, to battle ", or Punjabi maarna ( to kill, to hit ).
February was named after the Latin term februum, which means purification, via the purification ritual Februa held on February 15 ( full moon ) in the old lunar Roman calendar.
His finds were displayed as an exhibit on the " Early History of Johore ", at the National Museum of Singapore, and several beads that he had discovered suggested that trade went on between the Roman Empire and the Malays, presumably, Gardner thought, via India.
During the Roman period Britain ’ s continental trade was principally directed across the Southern North Sea and Eastern Channel, focusing on the narrow Strait of Dover, though there were also more limited links via the Atlantic seaways.
In 1969 the Vatican, during the papacy of Paul VI, without commenting on Pope Gregory's reasoning, implicitly rejected it by separating Luke's sinful woman, Mary of Bethany, and Mary Magdala via the Roman Missal .< ref > Lester, Meera.
An audiovisual light show is presented nightly on the western side of the mountain ( access by car from the Arad road or by foot, down the mountain via the Roman ramp path ).
Another previous route that ran through the Persian Gulf via the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, was also being threatened by exploitations from the Sassanid Empire, as well as being disrupted by the Lakhmids, the Ghassanids, and the Roman – Persian Wars.
Roman Emperor Augustus referred to his relation to the deified adoptive father, Julius Caesar as " son of a god " via the term divi filius which was later also used by Domitian and is distinct from the use of Son of God in the New Testament.
* February 25 – A major redistribution of territorial sovereignty within the Holy Roman Empire is enacted via an act known as the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss.
* 1274 – May 7 – The Second Council of Lyons, held by the leadership of the Roman Catholic Church convenes to consider the conquest of the Holy Land via Crusades and address the East-West Schism with the Byzantine church.
These emperors were elevated via a military career, from the condition of common soldiers in one of the Roman legions to the foremost positions of political power.
Roman etymologists thought it a borrowing via Etruscan from the Greek thriambus ( θρίαμβος ).
* May 7 – The Second Council of Lyons, held by the leadership of the Roman Catholic Church convenes to consider the liberation of the Holy Land via Crusades and address the East-West Schism with the Byzantine church.
To the west the principal Roman route, via Osismii, stretched from Condate to Vorgium ( modern Carhaix ).
Finally, the Roman praenomen ( given name ) Caeso was said to be given to children who were born via C-section.
The via Appia is believed to have been the first Roman road to feature the use of lime cement.
The name Gododdin is the Modern Welsh form ; it is derived, via Old Welsh Guotodin from the Brythonic language word Votadini, attested in Greek texts from the Roman period.
The Roman victory at Sentinum started a period of integration under the Roman rulers, who established some colonies ( e. g., Spoletium ) and built the via Flaminia ( 220 BC ), which became a principal vector for Roman development in Umbria.
In this sense, the Articles are a revealing window into the ethos and character of Anglicanism, in particular in the way the document works to navigate a via media, or " middle path ," between the beliefs and practices of the Roman Catholic Church and of the English Puritans, thus lending the Church of England a mainstream Reformed air.
It was crossed by two important Roman roads, the via xxiv-xxix ( joining Astorga to laminium and via xxv ( which joined Emerita Augusta and Caesaraugusta ), and contained some important conurbations.
The Roman Catholic Church, the Orthodox Church, the non-Chalcedonian churches and other groups often refer to presbyters in English as priests ( priest is etymologically derived from the Greek presbyteros via the Latin presbyter ).
Acoetes ( from Greek, via Latin Ăcoetēs ) was the name of two men in Greek and Roman mythology.

0.239 seconds.