「Charlemagne」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 226件
f Istria by the Franks brought the realm of | Charlemagne adjacent to Dalmatia. |
The County of Barcelona was created by | Charlemagne after he had conquered lands north of the r |
, was recorded in Latin during the reign of | Charlemagne, after the year 785, when the Frankish conq |
Charlemagne also made strenuous though not wholly succe | |
From Constantine to | Charlemagne: An Archaeology of Italy, AD300-800. |
On the other hand, the sagas of | Charlemagne and Arthur appear immediately in Middle Dut |
The friendship of | Charlemagne and Hildebold has become something of a leg |
The poem begins with a description of | Charlemagne and Tassilo, dux inclitus (distinguished du |
Aachen was a favoured residence of | Charlemagne, and the place of coronation of the Kings o |
Charlemagne and Carloman would inherit the two halves o | |
on Steengracht von Moyland, a descendent of | Charlemagne; and 2) Count Orlov. |
Just a few years later, in 796, | Charlemagne and Offa concluded the first commercial tre |
he illegitimate son of Rotrude, daughter of | Charlemagne, and Rorgon I of Maine. |
ding to the Salic law between his two sons: | Charlemagne and Carloman I. |
continued the history to the coronation of | Charlemagne and his brother Carloman on 9 October 768. |
The patrimony of | Charlemagne, and his son, Louis the Pius; Droysen found |
le on the continent under the protection of | Charlemagne, and his rebellion has been seen as serving |
This incident was the linchpin in | Charlemagne and Pope Hadrian I's argument that Tassilo |
However, the dispute between | Charlemagne and Hadrian as to who had the proper suzera |
hly uncertain grape identification separate | Charlemagne and these written claims. |
during the reigns of the Carolingian kings | Charlemagne and Louis the Pious. |
e Count Unroch who was leaving the court of | Charlemagne and signatory to the will of the emperor." |
Charlemagne's biographer Einhard calls her a "concubine | |
by Adalhard, who was an adviser to Emperor | Charlemagne and abbot of the monastery of Corbie, altho |
with confirmations from King Desiderius and | Charlemagne, and the tribunal found in Farfa's favour, |
orical images from antiquity to the time of | Charlemagne, and the palace church contained typologica |
apital of the County of Toulouse created by | Charlemagne, and which in the tenth century was one of |
s were finally removed from power in 788 by | Charlemagne and the Bavarian duchy was integrated into |
lled from England, Eardwulf was received by | Charlemagne and then the pope, and that their envoys es |
h Carloman following this, in opposition to | Charlemagne and the Papacy, which took the opportunity |
tion or hybridization in the period between | Charlemagne and Napoleon. |
s education at the Palace School founded by | Charlemagne and organized by Alcuin, where he studied f |
II or Louis the Bavarian, was a grandson of | Charlemagne and the third son of the succeeding Frankis |
r of France, which concerned the legends of | Charlemagne, and the Matter of Rome, which included mat |
Charlemagne and Pepin the Hunchback. | |
But he then broke loyalty with | Charlemagne, and Benevento remained on uneasy terms wit |
e traces in the succession of the emperors, | Charlemagne and his heirs following immediately after C |
Dominic Johnson, Ivan Jean-Marie, Maxime | Charlemagne, and Max Seales |
axon and medieval England, from the time of | Charlemagne, and partly through his doing, through the |
It was endowed by | Charlemagne and Louis the Pious. |
She was the sister of | Charlemagne and Carloman. |
Charlemagne and his wife Hildegard named their daughter | |
The chapel holds the remains of | Charlemagne and was the site of coronations for 600 yea |
The town was founded by | Charlemagne, and received its charter as a town in 1298 |
In 809, | Charlemagne appointed him to the see of Trier and in 81 |
the eighth century and the enthronement of | Charlemagne are predicted as a future events. |
daughter of an Alamannian count and married | Charlemagne around 794. Liutgard did not have any child |
But when in 778 | Charlemagne arrived in Zaragoza, Husayn denied any prom |
conventional ideas", however, in portraying | Charlemagne as superior to the Roman emperors, standing |
h a portion of a book that was dedicated to | Charlemagne as Emperor around 800. |
tself also attests to the responsibility of | Charlemagne as Frankish ruler for the salvation of his |
derata, who had married Carloman's brother, | Charlemagne, as part of a pact between the Franks and t |
As a youth he lived in the court of | Charlemagne, at Aix la Chapelle, as well as in that of |
After the domains had been conquered by | Charlemagne at the 774 Siege of Pavia they became part |
Charlemagne at Alcuin, painted 1830, at the Louvre | |
counts his colleagues, came to present [to | Charlemagne] at Aachen, the arms of the Breton chiefs w |
In 777 | Charlemagne attempted to take the city but he was force |
ents in foreign relations, among others the | Charlemagne Award of the city of Aachen in 1990. |
In 1957 he received the Karlspreis (engl.: | Charlemagne Award) an Award by the German city of Aache |
ved the Karlspreis (known in English as the | Charlemagne Award), an award by the German city of Aach |
001, the honor was known as the Alternative | Charlemagne Award. |
the first award in 2000 as the Alternative | Charlemagne Award. |
mansion for the first time, not long before | Charlemagne became ruler of the Germanic Franks. |
the northern coast of the Frankish Empire, | Charlemagne began paying Viking chieftains to protect s |
Charlemagne besieged Desiderius in his capital of Pavia | |
an instructor and translator for the French | Charlemagne brigade. |
s a gateway into the area together with the | Charlemagne building opposite. |
The Council was previously housed in the | Charlemagne building located across the street (now ren |
The | Charlemagne building is a high-rise in the European Qua |
The | Charlemagne building in 1975, before its modern renovat |
to have been offered the chance of marrying | Charlemagne, but ruined the opportunity. |
olk etymology holds that it was named after | Charlemagne, but this common Germanic name meant the me |
esiderius, however, had been alienated from | Charlemagne by the latter's repudiation of Desiderius' |
769 - 811) was the eldest son of | Charlemagne by Himiltrude. |
s reason that he overlooks the brutality of | Charlemagne's conquest of his people, for with Charlema |
himself a King of the Lombards, whereafter | Charlemagne came rushing into Italy where he routed the |
e sons and one daughter: of these, Charles ( | Charlemagne), Carloman, and Gisela survived to adulthoo |
The highway was also used by | Charlemagne, Charles V, Napoleon, and Kaiser Wilhelm II |
0 as the third battleship of her class, the | Charlemagne class. |
med his Donation in Rome in 756, and in 774 | Charlemagne confirmed the donation of his father. |
Charlemagne confirmed the election of Leo II, sending A | |
In 785, Emperor | Charlemagne confirmed his brother's donation. |
Under the rule of Adrian I, | Charlemagne conquered Pavia, ending the Lombard kingdom |
, though Hrodgaud's successors appointed by | Charlemagne continued to bear the title of a dux Foroiu |
As | Charlemagne could not take the city, he withdrew after |
After a month of siege | Charlemagne decided to return to his kingdom, taking so |
ity in the Frankish court, and, siding with | Charlemagne, defeated his uncle and the Byzantines. |
d the area east of the Lauwers in 785, when | Charlemagne defeated Widukind. |
orporated into the Carolingian Empire, when | Charlemagne deposed Odilo's son Duke Tassilo III in 788 |
When | Charlemagne died in 814, Hildebold donated to the const |
he number 33 was re-issued and given to the | Charlemagne Division. |
hat date from the Merovingian period before | Charlemagne, documents and the only known sketch of Joa |
From 812 onwards, when | Charlemagne, Emperor of France, ordered the extensive c |
tprand, later, it was a countship see under | Charlemagne, exactly on the border between the Kingdom |
In 809, King Godfred and emissaries of | Charlemagne failed to negotiate peace. |
lemagne for white wine, and the little used | Charlemagne for white wine. |
mouth of the river (mediaeval Trabena), as | Charlemagne for a time encouraged them to settle in the |
ork is a fragmentary Latin eclogue praising | Charlemagne for his defeat of Tassilo III of Bavaria in |
successful; her husband, Arechis, resisted | Charlemagne for some time, until in 787 he agreed to ma |
She resented her former brother-in-law, | Charlemagne, for his repudiation of her sister Desidera |
Hadrian called | Charlemagne for assistance. |
It is preceded by two capitularies of | Charlemagne for Saxony, the Capitulatio de partibus Sax |
781 - 808) was a daughter of | Charlemagne from his marriage to Hildegard. |
ine from 781, joint King of the Franks with | Charlemagne from 800 |
aria a part of the Carolingian Empire under | Charlemagne from 788 onwards, a Kaiserpfalz at Karnburg |
sion of the Gregorian Sacramentary, sent to | Charlemagne from Rome and augmented probably by Benedic |
The label of a Bonneau du Martray Corton | Charlemagne from 1999 |
Pippin's son, | Charlemagne, fulfilled the Carolingian goal of extendin |
Charlemagne gave the abbey of Saint-Loup to the scholar | |
aldwin,The Story of Roland and the Peers of | Charlemagne, George G. Harrap & Co., 1917 |
After | Charlemagne had conquered the Italian Kingdom of the Lo |
After | Charlemagne had subjected the Duchy of Saxony to his ru |
Charlemagne himself attempted to follow the iconoclasti | |
; he also includes the fascinating bit that | Charlemagne himself had commanded that four more Tones |
of either the Byzantine Empire or those of | Charlemagne himself, who soon assumed the former imperi |
e city, claiming that he had never promised | Charlemagne his allegiance. |
Tassilo, Duke of Bavaria, to rebel against | Charlemagne, his cousin: Charlemagne discovered Tassilo |
an al-Quelbi in the Arabic sources) offered | Charlemagne his own allegiance and the allegiance of Hu |
She encouraged her husband to rebel against | Charlemagne, his cousin. |
with the help of Frankish troops under King | Charlemagne in 791. |
church of Santo Stefano was established by | Charlemagne in the 9th century. |
first one was that which saw the victory of | Charlemagne, in 808, over the Saracens. |
owit had been defeated and made a vassal by | Charlemagne in the only expedition into Slavic territor |
to Gudfred, Halfdan swore his allegiance to | Charlemagne in 807 to get his protection. |
kind, and after a peace was negotiated with | Charlemagne in the Bardengau, Abbi and Widukind were bo |
Lex Saxonum are a series of laws issued by | Charlemagne in 785 as part of his plan to subdue the Sa |
Soon after the death of | Charlemagne in 814, Arno appears to have withdrawn from |
As an ally of | Charlemagne in his war against Saxons Witzan marched hi |
Slovenia, was the Avar March established by | Charlemagne in the late 8th century against the Avars. |
An epitaph written by | Charlemagne in verse, in which he styles Adrian "father |
first time in a letter from Pope Leo III to | Charlemagne in 813 (iscla from insula) though there is |
ng of Saturn (the lyrics were sung by Diane | Charlemagne), In 2007 it was given a funky house makeov |
d by armed force, successfully completed by | Charlemagne, in a series of campaigns (the Saxon Wars), |
ttlement was first mentioned about 780 when | Charlemagne in course of the Saxon Wars crossed the Oke |
Throne of | Charlemagne in the palace chapel. |
His daughter married King | Charlemagne in 771. |
ri quinque ("Annals of the Deeds of Emperor | Charlemagne in Five Books") was probably a monk of Sank |
yllable verses about the siege of Vienne by | Charlemagne in Girart de Vienne by Bertrand de Bar-sur- |
His sister Hildegard married King | Charlemagne in 771. |
Desiderata, married | Charlemagne in 768, divorced in 771 |
Hildegard, born in 758, married King | Charlemagne in 771. |
The denier was a French coin created by | Charlemagne in the Early Middle Ages. |
According to some sources, | Charlemagne intended to establish a diocese of Nordalbi |
St. Vicenzo, and both Pope Stephen III and | Charlemagne intervened. |
Capitulare de villis vel curtis imperii" by | Charlemagne is often mentioned as the historical standa |
eulogistic anecdotes regarding the Emperor | Charlemagne, is now commonly believed to be Notker the |
The nature of Himiltrude's relationship to | Charlemagne is a matter of dispute. |
During the Saxon wars of | Charlemagne, it was an important fortified base of the |
i" (Life of Charles the Great) biography of | Charlemagne, King of the Franks. |
ome and a few other centres in Italy, which | Charlemagne knew from his campaigns, and where he was c |
It consisted initially of the cities of | Charlemagne, Lachenaie, Mascouche and Repentigny; and t |
In 805 | Charlemagne made him Imperial Abbot and Abbot of the Ab |
Charlemagne made him Bishop of Pavia and Basle in 791. | |
In 774 | Charlemagne made liberal grants to the abbey. |
Obodrite, Saxon and Sorbian reinforcements, | Charlemagne managed to cross the Elbe River, advancing |
established in 1889 in the city of Croix by | Charlemagne Mayot. |
Some scholars have attempted to exonerate | Charlemagne of the massacre since, but these attempts h |
In 781 | Charlemagne offered the Bishop of Girona the territory |
er to Emperor Louis the Pious, successor to | Charlemagne, on the little river Inde. |
Bulfinch's "Legends of | Charlemagne, or Romance of the Middle Age" was translat |
nks, in the late 8th century, Frankish king | Charlemagne organised campaigns against the Veleti, and |
Conrad, Angus Maclise, John Cale, et al.), | Charlemagne Palestine, Eliane Radigue, Philip Glass, Kr |
dresh Mahanthappa, Hypnotic Brass Ensemble, | Charlemagne Palestine, Tony Conrad, Faust, James Morris |
icted was expelled, on the direct orders of | Charlemagne, penniless, into the streets. |
f Lombardy, a daughter of the eldest son of | Charlemagne, Pepin of Italy. |
vember 1st, 1919, resulting in the death of | Charlemagne Peralte, the supreme bandit chief in the Re |
By July 781, when a judicial decision of | Charlemagne placed the church under the control of Farf |
In 1961 he was awarded the | Charlemagne prize (Karlspreis) by the City of Aachen fo |
d by the Danes and only the intervention of | Charlemagne pushed them out of the Eider river. |
ld man, Alcuin wrote from his retirement to | Charlemagne, querulously commenting on "the daily incre |
ber of the Frankish party (the partisans of | Charlemagne) refused to consecrate him, due to his extr |
During the reign of | Charlemagne, Reichsannalen proliferate: the Annales Lau |
The French king, as the heir of | Charlemagne, renounced feudal overlordship over the cou |
Charlemagne, rex Francorum, had succeeded to the throne | |
Finally, in 780, | Charlemagne sent him to evangelize the Saxons. |
. 71), of the 28th of October 797, in which | Charlemagne shows less brutality and pronounces simple |
Celtic Cross as its emblem in honour of the | Charlemagne SS Waffen Division. |
r a long day hunting and in need of a rest, | Charlemagne stopped at a small chapel. |
On his retreat, | Charlemagne suffered an attack from the Basques in cent |
Charlemagne summoned an assembly in Toulouse in the spr | |
Charlemagne summoned an assembly in Toulouse in the spr | |
arlemagne is named after the French emperor | Charlemagne, supposedly because his wife preferred whit |
Alcuin died 19 May 804, and | Charlemagne survived till 28 January 814. |
of the nine cities of Istria complained to | Charlemagne that John was ignoring their ancient privil |
The plan backfired: after word came to | Charlemagne that Tassilo had been secretly plotting wit |
Frankish Empire, the great realm united by | Charlemagne that consisted of a large part of Western E |
ther places are named in another song about | Charlemagne: the Old French 12th-century chanson de ges |
After the death of | Charlemagne, the present-day territory of Belgium (exce |
the fall of the Kingdom of the Lombards to | Charlemagne, the ex-husband of Adelpurga's sister Desid |
hew the Ethiopians, Thomas the Indians, and | Charlemagne the Saxons. |
andoni family, who were serving the army of | Charlemagne then targeting the Principality of Benevent |
't you do an RM at William the Conqueror or | Charlemagne, then? |
They would be the last-living sons of | Charlemagne, though not the longest-living: Louis the P |
the Western Empire, from its Restoration by | Charlemagne to the Accession of Charles V, Vol. |
olendis is a well-known letter addressed by | Charlemagne to Abbot Baugulf of Fulda sometime between |
in a letter in which Pope Hadrian I exhorts | Charlemagne to follow Constantine's example and endow t |
n may be the Abu Taur of Huesca who invited | Charlemagne to Zaragoza in 778. |
the 9th century AD, it began to be used by | Charlemagne to determine how many warriors would be pro |
knight Sir Huon has been ordered by Emperor | Charlemagne to go to Baghdad, slay the man on the Calip |
Barton; from Da Vinci to Daniel Boone; from | Charlemagne to Chaucer to Confucius; from Emily Dickins |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |