「-arian」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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lenge for Wales' in 1996 and in 1998 'Y Llinyn | Arian', a biography of the Welsh nineteenth century |
ns, modern scholars depend more heavily on the | Arian accounts than the Catholic accounts. |
Up to this time his views were low | Arian, and it is doubtful whether they underwent any |
h synod which was part of the struggle between | Arian and orthodox ideas in Christianity. |
h Tridentum in the person of Alagis, a fervent | Arian and opponent of the Lombard king, Perctarit, w |
Severus was the episcopate of Zosimus, who was | Arian and thus considered heretical by the Catholic |
s disputes with her over religion, he being an | Arian and she a Catholic, brought on him the penalty |
Theodoric was an | Arian and decided to let the Goths (Arians) and the |
Barbas of Constantinople (died 430) was | Arian Archbishop of Constantinople from 407 until hi |
ntil 420-423 at latest) was briefly undisputed | Arian Archbishop of Constantinople, before being dis |
icizing Le Clerc's treatment of Eusebius as an | Arian, as the last of three dissertations appended t |
antinople it was in fact not acceptable for an | Arian as Patricius to have the possibility of becomi |
His | Arian Baptistry in Ravenna (c. |
The | Arian Baptistry in Ravenna, Italy was erected by the |
n August 1555 because he refused to recant his | Arian beliefs. |
s a deacon in Alexandria and a follower of the | Arian bishop Auxentius of Milan. |
young man and was ordained a deacon under the | Arian bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia. |
died 364), also called "The Ethiopian", was an | Arian bishop who was alternately in and out of favor |
rt of 588 a third conspiracy was headed by the | Arian bishop Uldila and the queen dowager Goisvintha |
ount of the life and death of Ulfilas that the | Arian bishop Maximinus included (383) in a work dire |
484 the Vandal king Huneric (477‑484) sent an | Arian bishop to Tipaza; whereupon a large number of |
ich he vainly requested them to substitute the | Arian bishop Theophilus for Frumentius. |
was baptised at the time of her wedding by an | Arian bishop. |
Servatius, and the two campaigned against the | Arian bishops and priests of the area. |
the adopted definition illegal, the dissenting | Arian bishops were initially exiled. |
Meletius of Antioch, who was supported by the | Arian bishops, who were under the mistaken notion th |
Theodoric was known as an | Arian, but Pomponius remained firm in his conviction |
as saints, with a feast day of March 26 in the | Arian calendar, and October 23 in a Gothic calendar. |
e snake, are interpreted as iconography of the | Arian Christian faith. |
Artemius was an | Arian Christian, as Emperor Constantius II was. |
d Gaidoald, who was a Catholic, rather than an | Arian Christian. |
Many of them had converted to | Arian Christianity during the third and fourth centu |
Arian Christianity, a sect which had been condemned | |
The Visigoths had traditionally been | Arian Christians, and it was the official religion o |
Both were | Arian Christians. |
560) of obscurity during which the Sueves were | Arian Christians. |
ville ascribes this to his refusal to join the | Arian Church of the Visigothic realm in Hispania. |
ics to the Eulalian basilica, but the majority | Arian commission found in favour of the Catholics. |
seat of the Western Imperial court, Nicene and | Arian controversy flared high. |
es of what became Catholic Christianity in the | Arian controversy which divided the IV century early |
He is chiefly known by the part he took in the | Arian controversy. |
st the doctrinal and other difficulties of the | Arian controversy. |
nvert the Roman Empire to Arianism by creating | Arian Councils and official Arian Doctrines. |
nation followed suit, though they adopted the | Arian denomination, not the Roman faith. |
Alahis (or Alagis) was the | Arian duke of Trent and Brescia before becoming king |
This proposal, however, the | Arian Eastern bishops declined to accept. |
judges were to be the court favourites of the | Arian empress; he also demanded for the Arians the u |
nder the Eastern Roman emperor Valens (also an | Arian), Eusebius travelled incognito through Syria a |
romoted by the influence of the then prevalent | Arian faction to the vacant see. |
hop of Vienne who converted Sigismund from the | Arian faith of his Burgundian forebears. |
His family demanded that he return to the | Arian faith, but he refused. |
rica by the Vandals under Gaiseric, who was of | Arian faith. |
t creeds to mention the harrowing of hell were | Arian formularies of Sirmium (359), Nike (360), and |
Arian Foster (born August 24, 1986) is an American f | |
Arian Foster had a 2 yard touchdown run and Erik Ain | |
Carriker stopped Houston RB | Arian Foster for a 2-yard loss in the second quarter |
Arian Foster, collegiate football star for the Tenne | |
ror Arcadius and defeated decisively the rebel | Arian Goth Gainas, in Thrace: he sinked the vessels |
stantinople, which had for forty years been in | Arian hands, were now restored to the orthodox; and |
, Egypt, who had been forced into exile by the | Arian heretics. |
Arian Keon Clark (born April 16, 1975 in Danville, I | |
ks suffered many hardships at the hands of the | Arian King Arioald. |
y years, Masona was not on poor terms with the | Arian king Leovigild. |
The | Arian king of Hispania, Chrotilda claimed, was gross |
These martyrs were killed during the reign of | Arian king Hunneric. |
hed from Africa to Corsica in 484 by Hunneric, | Arian King of the Vandals, built with their own hand |
e Panegyric of Theodoric, written to thank the | Arian king for his tolerance of Catholicism and supp |
elix IV, who had been a strong adherent of the | Arian king, and was never elected. |
John Tejada & | Arian Leviste - Forbidden Planet - Palette |
Arian Leviste (born January 19, 1970 in Burbank, Cal | |
The local Lombard prince, Romuald I son of the | Arian Lombard King Grimoald I, was himself seriously |
western and eastern Europe, in particular the | Arian mission to the University of Altdorf near Nure |
Ajax was an | Arian missionary to the pagan Suevi of Galicia who c |
For his | Arian namesake at Milan, see Auxentius of Durostorum |
Dagobert | Arian of the Jewish Agency suggested that Becher had |
Plinta was an | Arian of the sect of Psatirians (the followers of Ma |
brought before the Senate, and laid before the | Arian Ostrogothic Court at Ravenna. |
It was a huge blow to the | Arian party since it was surmised that the participa |
ve returned from exile, for he represented the | Arian party at the synod in Constantinople in 383. |
ne of the Trinity, Reid had the respect of the | Arian party, which was then on the eve of secession. |
s views on the Trinity, in which he adopted an | Arian position, revelling in what he called "the glo |
some sixty other bishops who did not hold the | Arian position. |
slation, entitled A Sovereign Antidote against | Arian Poyson, appeared in London, 1719, and again ‘r |
He brought Ulfilas into the | Arian priesthood and sent the latter to convert the |
They were refused, however, and all the | Arian priests were expelled from the city, on suspic |
ld and Hilarius of Poitiers quotes some of its | Arian propositions. |
regarded the Indians an early offspring of the | Arian Race. |
This | Arian resistance is not often mentioned in popular h |
mbards, elected after the assassination of the | Arian Rodoald. |
Recent guests have included Sami Al | Arian, Scott Ritter, Noam Chomsky, Greg Palast, Juan |
lie Frick its first vice-president, and Walter | Arian, second vice-president. |
Acacians, also known as the Homoeans, were an | Arian sect which first emerged into distinctness as |
In 565, after the condemnation of the | Arian sect, this small octagonal brick structure was |
The | Arian sources depict Ulfilas as an Arian from childh |
y (now Catholic) was detached from the public ( | Arian), the Arian undercurrent remained. |
c. 355; died 374), was an | Arian theologian and bishop of Milan. |
Around 354 AD, Emperor Constantius II sent the | Arian Theophilus on mission to south Asia via Arabia |
ed the Roman emperor Constantius II, a staunch | Arian, to extort the record from Eusebius and destro |
In the reign of the | Arian Vandal King Huneric (477-484 AD), he became en |
ilinus, who was killed during the reign of the | Arian Vandal king Hunneric in 484. |
tarian Christians in Proconsular Africa by the | Arian Vandals, according to Victor of Vita. |
They were killed at Adrumetum in 484 by the | Arian Vandals. |
s to Seddon, thought to be a liberal divine of | Arian views. |
ons with the goal of checking the power of the | Arian Visigoths under Leovigild. |
er of Visigothic unity, Liuvigild, last of the | Arian Visigoths. |
for the clergy and people of Constantinople an | Arian was not eligible to become an emperor, at the |
for the clergy and people of Constantinople a | Arian was not eligible to become an Emperor, at the |
He was, unlike his father-in-law, an | Arian who did not accept Catholicism. |
ctim to a revolt led by his cousin Gelimer, an | Arian, who led the people in a religious rebellion. |
He was an | Arian who governed from the ancient capital, Pavia, |
Lucius of Alexandria was an | arian who was twice installed as Patriarch of Alexan |
eing struck on the head with a roof tile by an | Arian woman. |
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