「Roman」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)13ページ目
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The | Roman Theatre of Cartagena. |
Olaf Thommessen is a | Roman Catholic of French and Norwegian descent. |
Aurora was the | Roman Goddess of the dawn. |
It was part of the | Roman province of Dalmatia. |
ic army under king Totila scattered the larger | Roman forces of generals Constantian and Alexander, |
Cantabrian Wars, war during the | Roman conquest of the ancient Cantabria and Asturias |
was excavated in 1973, under the ruins of the | Roman fort of Maia, the last Roman fort on the weste |
Soon after the | Roman conquest of Britain and the construction of Er |
He also made engravings of the | Roman works of Antonio Canova and Bertel Thorwaldsen |
Crossing Dover district are the | Roman roads of Watling Street and that leading from |
rded antiquity of the office dates back to the | Roman province of Britannia. |
22 BC - AD 40) was a | Roman archer of the Cohors I Sagittariorum. |
is named as such to represent the mythological | Roman God of war. |
A small | Roman statue of the goddess Victory was discovered a |
Among his most influential works was The | Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic (1899) |
lso has a historical connotation recalling the | Roman province of Armorica. |
It is very close to the site of the old | Roman fort of Cefn Caer (Pennal). |
Moridunum was a fort and small town in the | Roman province of Britannia. |
der used the name Lacus Brigantinus, after the | Roman city of Brigantium (today Bregenz). |
Ceres being the | Roman Goddess of Wheat, a reference to Chester's Agr |
11:23ff); who endured the | Roman penalty of crucifixion (I Cor. |
Roman statue of Thalia from Hadrian's Villa, nowaday | |
During the | Roman settlement of Britain it was an outpost of Wro |
She was named after Minerva, the | Roman goddess of crafts and wisdom. |
Pliny also stated that 20,000 | Roman pounds of gold were extracted each year. |
Flavius Merobaudes (died 383 or 388) was a | Roman general of Frankish origin. |
Nearby there is the | Roman Camp of Drobeta. |
The Diana of Versailles is a | Roman copy of his original (circa 325 BC). |
Wentwood), with "-went" deriving from the | Roman town of Venta which became Caerwent. |
The word "Ianuarius" is the original | Roman designation of the month January. |
Mediolanum Santonum was a | Roman town of southwestern Gaul, now Saintes. |
Map of the late | Roman Diocese of Egypt, with Thebais in the south. |
the town are the archaeological remains of the | Roman villa of Can Llauder. |
It was the site of the | Roman fort of Coggabata. |
The | Roman city of Zeugma is now drowned in the reservoir |
It corresponds to Damietta, in the | Roman province of Augustamnica Prima. |
the fifth century, Lavant replaced the ancient | Roman settlement of Aguntum. |
The Apollo is thought to be a | Roman copy of Hadrianic date (ca. |
is credited with introducing or advocating the | Roman method of dating the celebration of Easter. |
The area was also occupied during the | Roman occupation of Britain. |
A quinaria (plural: quinariae) is a | Roman unit of area, roughly equal to 4.2 square cent |
A | Roman Legatus of the Iudaea Province. |
Besides, they were allied with the | Roman family of Frangipani, opponents of the Pierleo |
Roman copy of Boethus' sculpture of a boy playing wi | |
Kostolany was born in Budapest, a Hungarian | Roman Catholic of Jewish descent. |
st of the items date to around the time of the | Roman Conquest of Britain. |
Grand Tour, the Earl acquired a collection of | Roman copies of Greek and Roman sculpture which is c |
Marullus was | Roman Prefect of Judea under Caligula, AD 37 - 41. |
The | Roman citizens of Hispania then pledged their allegi |
Roman villae of La Olmeda': The palatial Late Antiqu | |
In the General | Roman Calendar of 1962, they have a third-class feas |
The | Roman Conquest of Scotland: the battle of Mons Graup |
The | Roman Road of King Street passes through the village |
In fact, the | Roman governors of the area, Lupicinus and Maximus, |
hen tells the story of Akbah's conquest of the | Roman province of Mauretania Tingitana. |
Kepier may also have been the site of a | Roman crossing of the River Wear carrying a postulat |
his life as a desert hermit and denounced the | Roman way of life. |
Lactodurum was a town in the | Roman province of Britannia. |
The | Roman Amphitheatre of Florence, Italy was located ne |
In the General | Roman Calendar of 1962, they have a commemoration on |
onte (also Durolipons) was a small town in the | Roman province of Britannia. |
Alabum was a fort in the | Roman province of Britannia Superior, of which Roman |
It is named for the | Roman town of Nuceria Alfaterna, now known as Nocera |
cendants ruled Britain through the time of the | Roman invasion of Britain. |
His Highness Prince | Roman Petrovich of Russia |
R. G. Collingwood and R. P. Wright - The | Roman Inscriptions of Britain, vol. 1. |
After the | Roman conquest of Britain in AD 43, it developed as |
This act passed into | Roman legends of Germanic heroism. |
Lucius Calpurnius Piso was a | Roman statesman of the 1st century. |
Laterculus Polemii Silvii, an Imperial | Roman list of emperors and provinces by Polemius Sil |
These coins exhibit similarities with the | Roman coins of emperors Augustus and Tiberius; like |
ord cereal derives from Ceres, the name of the | Roman goddess of harvest and agriculture. |
found throughout the municipality, such as the | Roman villa of La Llosa, strategically located along |
The cult of Mithras was popular in the | Roman province of Pannonia. |
The | Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (1961) |
the Holy | Roman Empire of 962-1806 |
For the | Roman town of Cusum, see Petrovaradin. |
A | Roman skyphos of cameo glass can be seen at the Gett |
The | Roman road of the Fosseway descends into Batheaston |
Archelaus was the High Priest of the | Roman Goddess of War, Bellona. |
The monumental | roman church of Sant Jaume is a protected historico- |
The | Roman Office of Compline came to be richer and more |
The mill is close to the | Roman site of Verulamium. |
For the first few decades after the | Roman invasion of Britain in AD 43, the Fosse Way ma |
A mosaic from 'Archaeological site of the | Roman village of Tejada', |
Venerable John Cassian the | Roman, abbot of Monastery of St Victor, Marseille |
Roman is of Mexican American descent. | |
It seems clear that the | Roman population of Baetica was solidly behind this |
His research has focused mainly on | Roman history of the Republican and early imperial p |
Francis Haverfield - The | Roman Occupation of Britain, being six Ford Lectures |
Juvenal here makes reference to the | Roman practice of providing free wheat to Roman citi |
Flavia Solva was a municipium in the ancient | Roman province of Noricum. |
Burrium was a legionary fortress in the | Roman province of Britannia Superior or Roman Britai |
Silva was | Roman governor of Iudaea from 73 to 81 AD. |
She worked at the | Roman site of Cosa and at Serra Orlando (Morgantina) |
The park is named after the | Roman City of Verulamium on which it stands. |
is known as the childhood home of Shelly Rollo | Roman, wife of Bill Roman. |
He sent detachments throughout the | Roman province of Moesia with forces of Goths, Germa |
one of the few "must visit" locations for most | Roman Catholics of Lithuania. |
Smith, Norman (1970), "The | Roman Dams of Subiaco", Technology and Culture 11 (1 |
Passau was an ancient | Roman colony of ancient Noricum called Batavis, Lati |
It was the site of the ancient | Roman Battle of Mons Algidus. |
Their capital acquired the | Roman name of Corinium Dobunnorum, which is today kn |
The dish takes its name from Diana the | Roman goddess of the hunt. |
Isurium Brigantum was a town in the | Roman province of Britannia. |
It was named after Hersilia, | Roman wife of Romulus. |
For the | Roman lieutenant of the same name, see Lupicinus (Ro |
elaus' father served as the High Priest of the | Roman Goddess of War, Bellona. |
tion to Archelaus, Herod reconciled him to the | Roman Governor of Syria. |
In the antiquity the area was part of the | Roman province of Noricum. |
Monument to Suvorov as youthful Mars, the | Roman god of war, by Mikhail Kozlovsky (1801). |
Amor is named after the | Roman god of love, better known as Cupid. |
During the | Roman occupation of Britain, Coddenham was the large |
modern Turkish Anamur, is a major city of the | Roman province of Rough Cilicia, and Roman Catholic |
s born and raised in Perga, the capital of the | Roman province of Pamphylia. |
of Fieldhead Lane towards Drighlington is the | Roman Road of Tong Street. |
Remaining frescos from the | Roman city of Pompeii demonstrate that irrumatio was |
For the | Roman Catholic office, see Bishop of Argyll and the |
This article is about the | Roman Catholic office. |
ristian tradition states that he was a wealthy | Roman army officer who was martyred at Melitene, Arm |
Farnace conspires with Marzio, | Roman legionary officer, against Mitridate. |
380 Emperor Theodosius I made Christianity the | Roman Empire's official religion (see State church o |
Roman poets often conflated them with the fauns. | |
Roman Grzegorz Ogaza (November 17, 1952 - March 5, 2 | |
2003 movie Peter Pan, and the Artful Dodger in | Roman Polanski's Oliver Twist. |
A | Roman Catholic, Oliverio says that it is God's will |
Concangis is the only known | Roman fort on the road between York and Newcastle. |
For the | Roman fort on Hadrian's Wall, see Cilurnum. |
The hall's main steps have a colonnade with a | Roman frieze on the pediment. |
Ciriaci died in his | Roman residence on Via Rusticucci, at age 81. |
an essay on the | Roman roads on the lower Rhine (Berlin, 1834). |
Remains once thought to be a | Roman bridge on Dere Street over the Tees |
rose to the high ranks, coming to dominate the | Roman army on the Rhine. |
From Christopher Colombus out at sea, to | Roman Soldiers on watch. |
For the | Roman fort on Hadrian's Wall, see Magnis (Carvoran). |
There is also evidence for a | Roman setlement on the north east side of the hill, |
Roman constructions on brook under the buildings and | |
Close by to the north is where | Roman soldiers on the Elsick Mounth emerged from the |
As part of the coronation of Charles as Holy | Roman Emperor on 5 April 1355, in the Roman Basilica |
Two | Roman males on the Warren Cup, British Museum |
Aternum was a | Roman town, on the site of Pescara, in Italy. |
She converted to | Roman Catholicism on February 2, 1850 in Malta. |
The village has three churches: one | Roman Catholic, one Church of Ireland, and one Presb |
A | Roman street, one of the city's main streets running |
din- are the most prevalent in names used from | Roman times onward. |
Chariots | Roman Spa opened in 1997. |
Roman Nose opposed treaties with the United States F | |
- with her wealthy | Roman relatives opposing her bitterly. |
Superbus, the semi-legendary last king of the | Roman Kingdom, or Tarquinius Priscus, is one of the |
Roman Catholic or Evangelistic masses during events | |
fer to any major goddess worshipped during the | Roman Republic or Roman Empire. |
Pierfrancesco Scarampi (1596-1656) a | Roman Catholic oratorian and Papal envoy to Confeder |
The | Roman Catholic oratory at Ave Maria |
prince is a Benedictine monk, a member of the | Roman Catholic Order of Saint Benedict. |
Brothers Hospitallers of St. John of God are a | Roman Catholic order founded in 1572. |
There are 12 columns of the | Roman Doric order, bas relief of a Roman eagle and s |
ospital was founded by the Alexian Brothers, a | Roman Catholic order. |
Roman Gennadyevich Oreshchuk (Russian: Роман Геннадь | |
Anbiyam is a | Roman Catholic organisation, and there is a self hel |
He was active in musical, film, literary, and | Roman Catholic organisations. |
The form of the jambs is | Roman in origin. |
A | Roman villa originally occupied the hill, just outsi |
Roman Hoffstetter, OSB", DMA diss., Memphis St. Univ | |
is rumored to have been a relative of the Holy | Roman Emperor Otto III. |
Athanagild then endeavoured to drive his | Roman allies out of Iberia but was unsuccessful. |
It has the largest collection of | Roman antiquities outside Europe. |
Chesters Bridge was a | Roman bridge over the River North Tyne at Chollerfor |
The title is a quote from the Ancient | Roman poet Ovid. |
Proselytizing in the Religious History of the | Roman Empire, Oxford, 1994 ISBN 0-19-814941-7 |
trans. of Pierre Batiffol, "Hist. of the | Roman Breviary", p. 213). |
(joint ed.) Apologetics in the | Roman Empire: Pagans, Jews and Christians, Oxford, 1 |
The Norfolk Street | Roman Wall Paintings |
h punishments, and was in place at the time in | Roman occupied Palestine. |
orn in Alella (a small town near Barcelona) to | Roman Catholic parents. |
A | Roman Catholic parish church, Saint-Joseph-de-Lemieu |
It is part of the | Roman Catholic parish of Templemore, Clonmore and Ki |
It is one half of the | Roman Catholic parish of Kilsheelan & Kilcash in the |
Joseph of the Holy Family is a | Roman Catholic parish church in the Roman Catholic A |
Church of St. Peter is a | Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of |
The Church of St. Gabriel is a former | Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of |
Ardfield is part of the | Roman Catholic parish of Ardfield/Rathbarry. |
The Church of St. Christopher is a | Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of |
The St. Paul's Chapel is a | Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of |
f St. Joachim and St. John the Evangelist is a | Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of |
(Irish: Baile Baighe) is a small townland and | Roman Catholic parish in County Meath, Ireland. |
The Church of St. Eugene is a former | Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of |
Joseph is a | Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of |
The Church of the Holy Innocents is a | Roman Catholic parish church in the Roman Catholic A |
Joseph is a | Roman Catholic parish church in the Roman Catholic A |
Saint Pancras is a | Roman Catholic parish church in Ipswich, England cov |
The | Roman Catholic parish church |
The Church of St. Mary is a | Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of |
St. Denis' Church is a | Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of |
Immaculate Conception Catholic Church is a | Roman Catholic parish in Botkins, Ohio, United State |
It is part of the | Roman Catholic parish of Dromcollogher-Broadford. |
The Church of St. Agnes is a | Roman Catholic parish church in the Roman Catholic A |
The Church of the Blessed Sacrament is a | Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of |
lso nicknamed Little St. Joseph's Church, is a | Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of |
St. Luke's Church is a | Roman Catholic parish located in Defence Colony B-68 |
St. Casimir Parish was a | Roman Catholic parish designated for Polish immigran |
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