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name and Julia
Her Roman name was Julia Aurelia Zenobia and in Greek, she is known as Zēnobía () or Septimia Zenobia, having added Septimia after marrying Septimius Odaenathus.
English singer Julia Gilbert adopted the name of the film's main character when recording for the London-based él record label in the late 1980s.
In writers Jay Kogen and Wallace Wolodarsky's original script for " Bart the Daredevil ", Hibbert was a woman, named " Julia Hibbert ", who they named after comedic actress Julia Sweeney ( Hibbert was her married last name at the time ).
Julia is usually a woman's given name or a surname.
Like its male counterpart, the given name Julia had been in use throughout Late Antiquity ( e. g. Julia of Corsica ) but became rare during the Middle Ages, and was revived only with the Italian Renaissance.
* Julia Caesaris, the name of many Julias of the Julii Caesares ( Julius Caesar branch )
These dispositions permitted Livia to maintain her status and power after his death, under the new name of Julia Augusta.
A notice from AD 22 records that Julia Augusta ( Livia ) dedicated a statue to Augustus in the centre of Rome, placing her own name even before that of Tiberius.
LIVIA • DRVSILLA ( classical Latin ); LIVIA • AVGVSTA ( classical Latin ); Julia Augusta ( adopted name ); Empress of Rome ( title )
Julius Caesar as consul in 59 BC succeeded in carrying out the establishment of a Roman colony under the name Julia Felix in connection with his agrarian law, and 20, 000 Roman citizens were settled in this territory.
* Julia Nyberg, ( 1784 – 1854 ), Swedish poet ( used the name as her pseudonym )
During the Roman Empire, the area of Cerdanya was a pagus known as pagus Liviensis ( a name derived from its capital Julia Libyca ), part of the province of Hispania Tarraconensis.
As for Julia Libyca, the name evolved into Julia Livia and then Llívia.
It was missing both the ' o ' and also the hyphen in her last name, Julia Luis Dreyfus's '.
Jessica Mitford rarely spoke of Julia in later life and she is not referred to by name in Mitford's autobiographical novel, Hons and Rebels.
The Judith River in Montana was named in honor of Julia Hancock by Clark during the Expedition ; he mistakenly thought that was her given name, because he knew her as a child as " Judy ".
His French father Antoine ( name russianized as Anton Leonardovich ), had entered Russia as a member of Napoleon's army in 1812, settled in Vilnius upon their defeat, and married a local woman named Julia Gucewicz.
Like the Russian Czar it is directly derived from the Roman Emperors ' title of Caesar, which in turn is derived from the personal name of a branch of the gens ( clan ) Julia, to which Gaius Julius Caesar, the forebear of the first imperial family, belonged.
As of 2011, Yulia is signed to Gala Records and goes by the more Western adaptation of her name, " Julia Volkova ".
Iotapa would have put the Latin name Julia, as a part of her name.
Thomas the Younger's daughter Mary Augusta Arnold, became a famous novelist under her married name of Mrs Humphry Ward, whilst Tom's other daughter, Julia, married Leonard Huxley, the son of Thomas Huxley and their sons were Julian and Aldous Huxley.

name and appears
If the symbolic name or actual address of an index word or electronic switch appears or is included in the operand of an XRELEASE or SRELEASE statement ( see page 101 ), the specified index word or electronic switch will again be made available, regardless of the method by which it was reserved.
The name Fucus appears in a number of taxa.
The suffix-ol appears in the IUPAC chemical name of all substances where the hydroxyl group is the functional group with the highest priority ; in substances where a higher priority group is present the prefix hydroxy-will appear in the IUPAC name.
His name appears on a Greek Imperial coin.
In modern literature, Aeneas appears in David Gemmell's Troy series as a main heroic character who goes by the name Helikaon.
A fictionalized version of this Ahenobarbus appears in Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra under the name of " Enobarbus "
In later Assyrian and Babylonian texts, the name Akkad, together with Sumer, appears as part of the royal title, as in the Sumerian LUGAL KI. EN. GIR < sup > KI </ sup > URU < sup > KI </ sup > or Akkadian Šar māt Šumeri u Akkadi, translating to " king of Sumer and Akkad ".
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.
Ambrosius Aurelianus appears in later pseudo-chronicle tradition beginning with Geoffrey's Historiae Regum Britanniae with the slightly garbled name Aurelius Ambrosius, now presented as son of a King Constantine.
Abimilki's name appears on the Amarna tablets.
The name appears to have been derived from Yussuf ben-Serragh, the head of the tribe in the time of Mohammed VII of Granada, al-Mustain, who did that sovereign good service in his struggles to retain the crown of which he was three times deprived.
Despite the shared name of " Adoptionism " the Spanish Adoptionist Christology appears to have differed sharply from the Adoptionism of early Christianity.
The name Accrington appears to be Anglo-Saxon in origin.
Although it appears clear that Badminton House, Gloucestershire, owned by the Duke of Beaufort, has given its name to the sports, it is unclear when and why the name was adopted.
It is the most widely copied Old English poem, and appears in 45 manuscripts, but its attribution to Bede is not absolutely certain — not all manuscripts name Bede as the author, and the ones that do are of later origin than those that do not.
Solomon ’ s name appears in Proverbs 1: 1, " The proverbs of Solomon the son of David, King of Israel.
However, the bunyip appears to have formed part of traditional Aboriginal beliefs and stories throughout Australia, although its name varied according to tribal nomenclature.
According to Stephen Frederic Dale, the name Babur is derived from the Persian word babr, meaning " tiger ", a word that repeatedly appears in Firdawsī's Shāhnāma and had also been borrowed by the Turkic languages of Central Asia.
This name appears to be from the Aramaic,, meaning ' the son ( of the ) prophet '.
Most accounts incorrectly attribute this story to Herodotus ; actually, the story first appears in Plutarch's On the Glory of Athens in the 1st century AD, who quotes from Heracleides of Pontus's lost work, giving the runner's name as either Thersipus of Erchius or Eucles.
The Greek word Messias appears only twice in the Greek Old Testament of the promised prince ( Daniel 9: 26 ; Psalm 2: 2 ); yet, when a name was wanted for the promised one, who was to be at once King and Savior, this title was used.
The name Crete ( Κρήτη ) first appears in Homer's Odyssey.
The Kingdom of Alba, a name which first appears in Constantine's lifetime, was in northern Great Britain.

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