「ROMANS」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| The Story of | Romans: A Narrative Defense of God's Righteousness. |
| ed and his work at defending Carthage cost the | Romans a difficult campaign to suppress the defenders |
| Romans, a series of explanatory remarks on isolated t | |
| eral plagues and attacks by Saxon pirates, the | Romans abandoned Forum Hadriani. |
| is a stone and turf fortification built by the | Romans across what is now the Central Belt of Scotlan |
| en part of the process of winemaking since the | Romans added honey as a sweetening agent. |
| seems to have survived in good order until the | Romans administration left around AD 410. |
| The | Romans adopted a variation of the kontos called a con |
| Previous to both | Romans, Aeschylus used a similar phrase in Seven Agai |
| ntines wondered "what had happened to make the | Romans, after never stirring from their lines for so |
| The | Romans, after their conquest of Spain, restored the f |
| Hasdrubal surrendered himself to the | Romans after his family's unfortunate deaths, but wha |
| n Isarci people, a settlement was built by the | Romans after the area's conquest by general Nero Clau |
| Cyzicus was held for the | Romans against King Mithridates VI of Pontus who besi |
| Wenceslaus, King of the | Romans, agreed to mediate the dispute. |
| ered with the utmost seriousness by Greeks and | Romans alike. |
| Once the | Romans' allied cavalry was destroyed Hanno and Hasdru |
| On July 14, 1863, | Romans allocated $3,000 to construct three earthen fo |
| The | Romans almost certainly used the riverside in Brundal |
| hore Forts were a series of forts built by the | Romans along the Channel on the English and French si |
| ally thought to have led the fight against the | Romans alongside his brother, but to have been killed |
| ed for the good thief who was crucified by the | Romans alongside Jesus (Lucas 23:40-43). |
| Contes et | romans alsaciens (1876) |
| Palfreyman his Paraphrase on the | Romans; also certain little tracts of Mart. |
| The | Romans also previously set up the Bezabde Camp (moder |
| also been discovered making it likely that the | Romans also settled in the area. |
| The | Romans also built a watch tower, within Mynydd y Twr |
| m pre-Roman times, and it is possible that the | Romans also lived in the area. |
| e 19th century, but there is evidence that the | Romans also produced lead here. |
| e Latin word for money, pecunia, is proof that | Romans always saw cattle (pecus) as the source of wea |
| Dexter also fronts Dexter Romweber and The New | Romans, an ensemble of 7 musicians and 3 female backi |
| The city was first founded by the | Romans and was named after Trajan. |
| the supposed impostor Cleopatra, drive out the | Romans and restore Egypt to its golden era. |
| pposed to strengthen their defense against the | Romans and not become a factor to a civil conflict. |
| nally in the Iron Age, and subsequently by the | Romans and Vikings, construction of the Norman castle |
| May all go well with the | Romans and with the nation of the Jews at sea and on |
| s paternal lands, after giving hostages to the | Romans and thus making peace. |
| to start building menhirs, selling them to the | Romans and putting their subsequent wealth on display |
| uenced the election of Henry II as King of the | Romans and legitimazing him in 1024, when he visited |
| ruins of a large castle (likely founded by the | Romans, and later re-used by the Moors), declared nat |
| wars of his people, he broke the pact with the | Romans and refused to accept peace from them any long |
| He was later caught by the | Romans, and returned to Verulamium where he was execu |
| the Diablintes, later occupied and settled by | Romans and called Civitas Diablintum. |
| ing of Persia with the king as the King of the | Romans and all ladies of the court in attendance. |
| of this war, defeating tribes allied with the | Romans and destroying a huge Roman army at the Battle |
| was in the city of Agrigentum, besieged by the | Romans, and Hanno was sent to provide relief. |
| $, is a one-hour news show hosted by Christine | Romans and Ali Velshi broadcast by CNN from the Time |
| re almost 2500 years ago, later widely used by | Romans and in the Middle Ages. |
| he site of modern Boulogne was occupied by the | Romans and was used by the emperor Claudius as his ba |
| who participated in fights with or against the | Romans, and thus acquiring Roman objects and Roman wa |
| was transformed into a temple fortress by the | Romans and surrounded by a 270 X 444 metre long stone |
| ek cities of Emporiae and Tarraco welcomed the | Romans, and Gnaeus began to win over the Iberian trib |
| on, if the areas had not been conquered by the | Romans and included as the western part of the Roman |
| ilpadjies had already been made by the ancient | Romans and the German recipe for calf's liver in caul |
| irst in the mid-50s, which was defeated by the | Romans, and again in 69, this time successfully. |
| be because it was a colour associated with the | Romans, and he was not casting off Roman aspirations |
| eople safe and to keep out the invaders mainly | romans and others who might have tried to lay siege t |
| He was a violent and terrifying figure to the | Romans and Byzantines struggling to maintain control |
| ubject to Alberic II of Spoleto, Prince of the | Romans, and did not effectively rule the Papal States |
| into Wales for successive invaders such as the | Romans and Normans. |
| A war breaks out between the | Romans and Ptolemy's Egyptian forces, and in the proc |
| It was the custom of | Romans and Greeks to move from one party or banquet t |
| His main enemies are the | Romans, and he makes an unholy alliance to defeat the |
| the 1st century BC, the fort was conquered by | Romans and the settlement was known as Acumincum (acu |
| During the wars between | Romans and Dacians, the Bistra Valley was the route u |
| AD 115) quotes from 1 Corinthians, | Romans, and from 1 Timothy and Titus as if authoritat |
| The Nemetes fought alongside the | Romans and Vangiones against the Chatti when the latt |
| he first century BC, the fort was conquered by | Romans and the settlement was known as Acumincum (acu |
| It was known as lapis atracius to the ancient | Romans and was quarried especially at Casambala, near |
| de both approach and retreat difficult for the | Romans, and comparatively easy for his own forces. |
| on, Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall, King of the | Romans; and three daughters, Joan, Isabel, and Eleano |
| Mithridates eluded the | Romans and managed to recover his kingdom. |
| and Persian prisoners who were captured by the | Romans and held in Amida. |
| th of the welcome given by the populace to the | Romans, and still more to Attalus, could not have bee |
| was fought on 6 April 402 (Easter) between the | Romans and the Visigoths. |
| allow has had to be reintroduced twice, by the | Romans and the Normans, after it died out during the |
| He wrote down the Apostle Paul's letter to the | Romans, and was Bishop in Iconium after the Apostle S |
| ly brought to the arid regions of Spain by the | Romans and the Moors. |
| f our lord King Henry, and Richard King of the | Romans, and the Lord Edward eldest son of the said Ki |
| The clash of cultures between the | Romans and the tribes is the main theme of the film, |
| Pharnaces II was defeated by the | Romans and he fled and took refuge from the Romans wi |
| … in company with the | Romans and the Athenian magistrates, he began his pro |
| en elapsed since the city was destroyed by the | Romans, and it had since been rebuilt as Aelia Capito |
| Thompson, E. A. | Romans and Barbarians: The Decline of the Western Emp |
| eprinted as "The Suevic Kingdom of Galicia" in | Romans and Barbarians: The Decline of the Western Emp |
| ather-in-law, Asander would win favor with the | Romans and they could help him become Bosporan King. |
| kara) also known as Nelcynda and Tyndis to the | Romans and The Greeks and Thondi to the Taamils and i |
| Suspecting this, the | Romans and Visigoths put Sangiban in the center of th |
| ersians, Greeks, Parthians, Pontus, Galatians, | Romans and Byzantines, up to Seljuks and finally the |
| t I.) (July 1255 - 1 May 1308) was King of the | Romans and Duke of Austria, the eldest son of German |
| Pledges, or Pawns, as it was in use among the | Romans, and as it is now practiced in most foreign Na |
| She had a brother Wenceslaus, King of the | Romans and one half sister Katharine of Bohemia whose |
| ought to light many evidences of occupation by | Romans and by early Britons. |
| The | Romans, and much later the Arabs, made the settlement |
| In 177 BC the town was conquered by the | Romans and destroyed. |
| a treaty was concluded in 263 BCE between the | Romans and King Hieron II of Syracuse, Netum was noti |
| ridge on this site was originally built by the | Romans and the present bridge is largely the result o |
| eputedly uses the same spring once used by the | Romans and the World War I fortifications, but this n |
| nvasion of Gaul in 406, but quickly joined the | Romans, and subsequently played a role in the interna |
| Ages lived in the area, to be followed by the | Romans and then by the Anglo-Saxons. |
| According to George Finlay (Greece under the | Romans) and J.B. Bury (History of the Later Roman Emp |
| luding the Carthaginians, the Phoenicians, the | Romans and the Arabs. |
| l cut, thought to have been constructed by the | Romans, and joined the River Great Ouse at Prickwillo |
| e Gothic Kingdom and the Dark Age of Spain" in | Romans and Barbarians: The Decline of the Western Emp |
| s subsequently controlled by Greeks, Persians, | Romans and the Byzantines. |
| that internal conflict would only benefit the | Romans and Getafix who refuses to offer his magic pot |
| Reprinted in | Romans and Barbarians: The Decline of the Western Emp |
| Answer Man (previously titled The Dream of the | Romans and Arlen Faber) is a 2009 romantic comedy fil |
| It is said that when Hannibal fled from the | Romans and came to Armenia, he suggested different pr |
| an abacus, the calculating devices used by the | Romans, and those before them for thousands of years. |
| e authorities now argue that he sided with the | Romans and is one and the same person as the client-k |
| s who were already in Great Britain before the | Romans, Anglo-Saxons and Normans came, and hence, a C |
| Blow | Romans appear in the Faber Castle, west of the town. |
| According to others, the | Romans appear to have learned of crucifixion from the |
| 0 - 15 May 1792 Her Majesty the Empress of the | Romans, Archduchess of Austria, Queen of Hungary, Boh |
| lly it was part of the Forest of Ardennes, the | Romans' Arduenna Silva, and even at the time of the F |
| The | Romans are played by Americans "to achieve a little c |
| The | Romans are reported to have used cucumbers to treat s |
| The surviving texts of | Romans are verses 2:12-13; 2:29, they are in a fragme |
| ercules which testify the Hadrian reign of the | Romans are seen at the baths. |
| The surviving texts of | Romans are verses 6:10-13, 19-22. |
| As the | Romans are using deceptive methods to try getting the |
| As the | Romans are taking him to a garrison in Gaul (as it ha |
| hich Obelix says his famous catchphrase "These | Romans Are Crazy"! |
| Originally a settlement founded by the | Romans around AD 52 or 70, it was called Mediolanum, |
| London's first defensive wall was built by the | Romans around 200 AD, 150 years after the city was fo |
| Prior to the | Romans' arrival, Harringay was part of a large area c |
| the East Midlands and the parts of Britain the | Romans arrived in, like Colchester and Chichester." |
| Inchtuthil (known to the | Romans as Victoria) is the site of a Roman legionary |
| rk of edification, composed in 1250, titled li | romans as ymages des poinz de nostre foi, where Joinv |
| of Egrisi, known to the ancient Anatolians and | Romans as Lazica was known to Persians as Lazistan. |
| -Carthage connection was very important to the | Romans, as it meant control over the fertile hinterla |
| rk includes Cox's Mount, which was used by the | Romans as a hill fort, which was discovered in 1915. |
| to the garrison at Hardknott Fort (know to the | Romans as Mediobogdum), 14 km to the north-east. |
| f Cunobelinus, whose policies were used by the | Romans as a pretext for the invasion. |
| Cabo da Roca was known to the | Romans as Promontorium Magnum and during the Age of S |
| Cartimandua was rescued by the | Romans as Venutius seized power. |
| traditional view is that he was killed by the | Romans as one of the Ten Jewish Martyrs. |
| one, or possibly even both, were known by the | Romans as Gariannonum. |
| This is the group referred to by the | Romans as the Scotii. |
| The | Romans assigned these calends to the first day of the |
| The Greeks and | Romans associated Virgo with their goddess of wheat, |
| ievement was a spectacular victory against the | Romans at the Battle of Arausio in 105 BC. |
| Ligurian tribe of the Statielli had joined the | Romans at an early period, but were attacked in 173 B |
| ion against his father and crowned King of the | Romans at Milan in 1093, and the Empress (Adelaide or |
| Following his monarch's defeat by the | Romans at the Battle of Magnesia in 190 BC, Artaxias |
| Europe had not yet come into contact with the | Romans at the beginning of the Iron Age. |
| crowned the Bavarian duke Henry IV King of the | Romans at Mainz, after the assassination of his rival |
| In 73 BC, Mithridates, after his defeat by the | Romans at Cyzicus, applied to Machares for succours, |
| its culture and records were destroyed by the | Romans at the end of the Third Punic War, very few Ca |
| e final contingent of Jewish resistance to the | Romans at Masada which stated that the Roman fortress |
| historic city of Leicester was founded by the | Romans at the crossing of the River Soar by the Fosse |
| ough the wall into the City, five built by the | Romans at different times in their occupation of Lond |
| From the conquest of Wales onwards the | Romans attempted to contain guerrilla resistance in t |
| n the walls of the channel to fires set by the | Romans attempting to force the Jewish survivors out o |
| Among the Greeks and | Romans, Babylonia or Chaldea was so identified with a |
| es, including naval battles, spoils of war and | Romans battling Germanics and Gauls. |
| significantly outnumbered, Asterix leaves the | Romans beaten and bruised for daring to interrupt his |
| Most Roman Christians, like the pagan | Romans before them, designated their years by naming |
| last major building projects undertaken by the | Romans before the Roman departure from Britain in 410 |
| The | Romans began to use barrels in the 3rd century AD, re |
| der the censorship of Lucius Mummius, when the | Romans began to gild the ceilings of their temples an |
| Temple of Jupiter in Damascus was built by the | Romans, beginning during the rule of Augustus and com |
| Rocking | Romans- Best of new Catholic Music 2008 (Critical Mas |
| thors in the previous century claimed that the | Romans borrowed this custom from the Etrurians, thoug |
| ineffective against the fortified hilltop, the | Romans breached the walls with sappers, and took the |
| of Rheims built the arch in gratitude when the | Romans brought major roads through their city. |
| The | Romans brought Christianity to these islands, along w |
| om the Latin Buccella, or bite, to the ancient | Romans buccellatum the format was a round loaf of bre |
| Around AD 72, the | Romans built a timber fort on the site. |
| es from Latin Fanum, a kind of temples ancient | romans built in pre-roman cults sacred places. |
| The | Romans built a fortress there, known as Castellum to |
| Roman province of Galatia and soon after, the | Romans built a road connecting Lystra to Iconium in t |
| The | Romans built here some bridges which are used today. |
| The | Romans built a working fort at the junction of the Ri |
| The | Romans built the Limes Germanicus to secure this bord |
| The | Romans built the road from Tongeren to Venlo via Muns |
| The | Romans built an aqueduct to supply the town with wate |
| The | Romans built a military station as a part of the near |
| At Reculver, the | Romans built a fort that was about 1 mile (1.6 km) fr |
| During this time the | Romans built a fort at Harbutts Field (SJ70216696), t |
| The | Romans built a very large sundial in 10 BC, the Solar |
| dicated to Zamolxis, upon which the conquering | Romans built a temple dedicated to the god Mars. |
| Newnham's location on the Severn, the Ancient | Romans built three roads through the location, where |
| The | Romans built a fort over an Iron Age settlement somet |
| During the Antonine period the | Romans built the Antonine Wall from the Forth to the |
| the sanctuary enjoyed a new upsurge under the | Romans, but in AD 395 the Goths raided the sanctuary. |
| only after the destruction of Jerusalem by the | Romans, but already at the destruction by Nebuchadnez |
| first constructed outside the City Wall by the | Romans, but became filled in and obliterated. |
| Viticulture came to the Tarn with the | Romans, but little is known of the history of Duras. |
| As such is the case, your enemies include | Romans, but also the genre classic agitated animals. |
| to a humbler size: not that of Emperor of the | Romans but that of King of the Greeks. |
| Cartimandua, but she showed her loyalty to the | Romans by handing him over in chains. |
| The Epistle to the | Romans, by Karl Barth; translated from the 6th editio |
| nd; the Britons represented by Caractacus, the | Romans by Constantine, the Danes by Canute, the Saxon |
| He however threw a sop to the | Romans by reducing the Jubilee term from one hundred |
| e Persians in 573-574, but was returned to the | Romans by Khosrau II after the Roman-Persian treaty i |
| After the Marcomannic Wars (which the | Romans called bellum Germanicum) the administration o |
| nted bodegones, fish so cleverly done that the | Romans called him lo Spagnuolo dei pesci ("the Spania |
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