「Roman」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)15ページ目
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In the | Roman era, Castro Marim was known as Aesuris. |
ys later was the Province's capital during the | Roman era, which also comprised Cyrnaica (ancient Li |
The drier northern area was settled before the | Roman era. |
ll clays in Britain dates back to at least the | Roman era. |
1922, treasure was discovered dating from the | Roman era. |
gy developed in Ptolemaic Egypt and during the | Roman era. |
The cave was still used in Classical Greek and | Roman eras, when the fertility goddess Artemis or he |
tation going back to the Neolithic, Dacian and | Roman eras. |
Broughton is situated on the | Roman Ermine Street. |
Roman eventually lost his position on the first team | |
Wounded twice during combat, | Roman eventually left for the Soviet Union. |
'Shurup' Povazhny, Pacifist, Ivan Mitrofanov, | Roman Evlanov, Ivan Sergeev |
The | Roman expansion north was halted by the Brigantes fo |
On the first of May, | Roman families traditionally eat Pecorino with fresh |
Besides, they were allied with the | Roman family of Frangipani, opponents of the Pierleo |
The Theodosian dynasty was a | Roman family that rose to eminence in the waning day |
For the | Roman family, see Aelia (gens). |
He was the son of a noble | Roman family. |
His legend states that he was born of a noble | Roman family. |
There are other | Roman features scattered throughout the valley. |
Safford named it after Feronia, a | Roman fertility goddess. |
Among his most influential works was The | Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic (1899) |
e and the River Trent lie an extensive area of | Roman fields with associated villa. |
A series of regular enclosures and semi-open | Roman fields dominate the site. |
quite realistically, and show her knowledge of | Roman fighting techniques. |
ociety display (Autumn 2006), one can view two | Roman figurines unearthed from the Brighton Roman Vi |
Roman Filippov - robber | |
He claims to work for big | Roman film studios, but he's a fraud. |
e of a youth, found at Ziphteh, near Athribis, | Roman, first century BC (British Museum) |
y 13, a fleet of 17 Vandal ships surprised the | Roman fleet. |
Roman floor mosaic depicting the Romulus and Remus m | |
Roman floor mosaic ca 250 CE. | |
Roman floor mosaic. | |
On the sea, a | Roman flotilla was captured by a Germanic one. |
volume also saw the debut of Knuth's Concrete | Roman font, designed to complement AMS Euler. |
149TH STREET" in Times New | Roman font. |
143RD STREET" in Times New | Roman font. |
The | Roman force was completely overwhelmed and the legat |
With the help of a | Roman force, including a fleet to watch the coasts, |
d the emperor Nero to consider withdrawing all | Roman forces from the island, but Suetonius' eventua |
ic army under king Totila scattered the larger | Roman forces of generals Constantian and Alexander, |
The | Roman forces were slaughtered; the Emperor Valens wa |
NCISD serves the cities of | Roman Forest and Woodbranch and the minuscule Montgo |
Roman Forest is a town in Montgomery County, Texas, | |
He was identified with the | Roman forest god Virbius. |
Cardiff | Roman Fort was a coastal fort in the Roman province |
The Muiryfold and the | Roman fort of Cawdor are located near Inverness. |
At Ardoch are the remains of a | Roman fort and castra which included Ardoch Tower. |
urium was originally the site of a 1st century | Roman fort at the crossing of Dere Street (the Roman |
Site of | Roman fort |
Concangis is the only known | Roman fort on the road between York and Newcastle. |
The road ran past the | Roman fort of Concangis, located at Chester-le-Stree |
The | Roman Fort is situated on the old Roman Road between |
The remains of a | Roman fort have been discovered in the village. |
For the | Roman fort on Hadrian's Wall, see Cilurnum. |
was excavated in 1973, under the ruins of the | Roman fort of Maia, the last Roman fort on the weste |
Scafell Pike from Hardknott | Roman Fort |
It was the site of a | Roman fort known as Venonis. |
kermouth, the river flows by Papcastle where a | Roman fort bears the name of the river. |
It is very close to the site of the old | Roman fort of Cefn Caer (Pennal). |
Metchley Fort was a | Roman fort in what is now Birmingham, England. |
It was the site of the | Roman fort of Coggabata. |
Segontium is a | Roman fort for a Roman auxiliary force, located on t |
y crossed the Dyfi by a ford or ferry near the | Roman fort at Pennal. |
The | Roman fort called Segontium was established in about |
Segedunum | Roman Fort & Museum, Wallsend |
BREMENIVM | Roman Fort & Marching Camps, High Rochester, Northum |
There was a | Roman fort at Templeborough, about 4.5 kilometres (2 |
Stanwix is built on the site of a | Roman fort known as Petriana or Uxelodunum. |
Main article: Cardiff | Roman Fort |
is managed by Tyne and Wear Museums as Arbeia | Roman Fort and Museum. |
For the | Roman fort on Hadrian's Wall, see Magnis (Carvoran). |
The remains of the Bothwellhaugh | Roman Fort and a Roman bath house are based in the p |
Manduessedum was a | Roman fort and later a civilian small town in the Ro |
he area takes its name from the remains of the | Roman fort found there which were mistakenly believe |
tchester (Portus Adurni) is the best preserved | Roman fort north of the Alps. |
Elginhaugh | Roman Fort was a Roman fort of the 1st century AD, l |
There are remains of both a | Roman fort and Roman pottery kilns in the area. |
He agrees for Merlyn to move his people to a | Roman fort Mediabogdum, a Roman fort on the edge of |
via Glevensium, or occasionally Glouvia) was a | Roman fort in Roman Britain that become "colonia" of |
Location of a large | Roman fort and its earthworks can been seen from the |
Longovicium (or Lanchester | Roman Fort) was an auxiliary fort on Dere Street, in |
icle is about the farm at Housesteads, for the | Roman fort, see Vercovicium. |
Outlane is also the location of a | Roman fort, also known as Slack, Roman name possibly |
Segedunum | Roman Fort, Baths & Museum opened to the public in J |
nal Trust/English Heritage Plaque at Hardknott | Roman Fort. |
Piercebridge was also the site of a | Roman fort. |
Linked by a bridge to Birdoswald | Roman Fort. |
on a bridge at Willowford, east of Birdoswald | Roman Fort. |
tiquaries of Scotland begins excavating Ardoch | Roman Fort. |
Roman fortification Layout on Razelm's Insula Biseri | |
One end of the ridge is Dara, a | Roman fortification. |
The name Oberkassel refers to a | Roman fortification; in the course of time "Romerkas |
Roman fortifications were excavated in the site of D | |
The settlement evolved into an | Roman fortified town called Bononia. |
is great emphasis on Isca Augusta, the city's | Roman fortress at Caerleon. |
well, a bath-house and many other parts of the | Roman fortress have been identified. |
The fort is one of Europe's only three-walled | Roman forts. |
D-shaped towers are typical of 3rd-century of | Roman forts. |
The | Roman Forum is a Roman archaeological site in Tarrag |
piter is on the hill of Campidoglio and not on | Roman Forum 84.253.136.132 |
ixed-reality performance works, including 'The | Roman Forum' (2000), 'The Roman Forum Project' (2003 |
It is believed that the | Roman Fosse Way forded the brook near the present La |
f its length the A429 follows the route of the | Roman Fosse Way. |
Forum Novum was a new | Roman foundation which developed as a forum or marke |
showed that about 80% of the buildings lie on | Roman foundations, making Spello the most Roman of a |
e 11-century baptistry of St. John is built on | Roman foundations. |
Roman France, 1972 | |
The hall's main steps have a colonnade with a | Roman frieze on the pediment. |
A | Roman Frontier Post and its People- James Curle |
V. E. Nash-Williams - The | Roman Frontier in Wales. |
Roman Gabriel, NFL Comeback Player of the Year Award | |
Roman Gabriel, NFL Leader, 23 touchdown passes | |
Roman Galinski (1905-1974), Polish-American journali | |
n 1971, Nini Pirandello, the wife of Twombly's | Roman gallerist Plinio De Martiis, died suddenly. |
the Caesar Bireme, a | roman galley from around 30 BC. |
Raymond Hains, uns | roman, Gallimard 2004 |
HORTVS: The | Roman Gardening Book, Routledge 2004 |
Plaza was a terrace styled with influences of | Roman gardens. |
Claudius had withdrawn the | Roman garrison under Aulus Didius Gallus from the Bo |
The | Roman garrison here was a detachment of 500 cavalry |
The | Roman Gartree Road crosses the village east to west |
Part of the | Roman Gask Ridge, it is said to be one of the most c |
A | Roman gatehouse and barracks have been reconstructed |
She left her husband, king Bisinus and went to | Roman Gaul. |
Roman Gavalier (born May 30, 1971) is a Slovak ice h | |
He was defeated and killed by the | Roman general Promotus. |
Flavius Merobaudes (died 383 or 388) was a | Roman general of Frankish origin. |
The British forces were defeated by the | Roman general Suetonius Paullinus. |
The real Gaius Julius Caesar was a | Roman general who seized control of the Roman govern |
Roman general Pompey defeated the pirates. | |
In 457, the | Roman general Majorian succeeded to the throne of th |
Mundus (Greek: Μούνδος; died 536) was an East | Roman general during the reign of Justinian I. |
The | Roman general Pompey conquered Judea in that year. |
Flavius Belisarius, the famous | Roman general, was born in the town which preceded S |
It is named for Germanicus, an ancient | Roman general, a nephew of Tiberius, and a poet. |
d 249 BC/246 BC) (of the Claudii family) was a | Roman general. |
The late-antique Geniscus may be a form of the | Roman Genius, pictured here in a 1st-century BC wall |
Roman Gennadyevich Oreshchuk (Russian: Роман Геннадь | |
Lake Constance was first mentioned by the | Roman geographer Pomponius Mela about 43CE. |
Dictionary of Greek and | Roman Geography by William Smith (1857). |
ith, William (editor); Dictionary of Greek and | Roman Geography, "Apameia", London, (1854) |
Dictionary of Greek and | Roman Geography. |
Excavations at Tepe Sialk by | Roman Ghirshman begin (continue in 1934 and 1937). |
A young Frye and | Roman Ghirshman, Susa, 1966. |
Hindi: Estriks aur | Roman ghuspaithiyaa |
In 2006, he signed a protest against | Roman Giertych. |
Roman Glass St George, promoted as champions of the | |
Roman Glick, bass guitarist for American rock band J | |
Neptune is the | Roman god of the sea. |
The name Janus arises from the double-faced | Roman god Janus. |
In mythology, Aquila was owned by the | Roman god Jupiter and performed many tasks for him. |
is named as such to represent the mythological | Roman God of war. |
Its name derives from the | Roman god Bacchus. |
The name was appropriate as Janus was a | Roman god with two faces. |
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. |
enters of worship where he is assimilated to a | Roman god, Borvo was equated with Apollo. |
British aircraft manufacturer named after the | Roman god. |
s opened by John Reith and was named after the | Roman god. |
Ceres is named after the | Roman goddess of agriculture. |
Flora Fountain named after the | Roman goddess Flora |
Other examples include the | Roman goddess Vesta, and other hearth-goddesses, suc |
She was associated with the | Roman goddess Ceres. |
Aurora was the | Roman Goddess of the dawn. |
Ceres being the | Roman Goddess of Wheat, a reference to Chester's Agr |
She was named after Minerva, the | Roman goddess of crafts and wisdom. |
ord cereal derives from Ceres, the name of the | Roman goddess of harvest and agriculture. |
Archelaus was the High Priest of the | Roman Goddess of War, Bellona. |
The dish takes its name from Diana the | Roman goddess of the hunt. |
elaus' father served as the High Priest of the | Roman Goddess of War, Bellona. |
For the | Roman goddess, see Libitina. |
For the | Roman goddess, see Fornax (mythology). |
It is named after Pax, a | Roman goddess. |
rdered Florian to offer sacrifice to the pagan | Roman gods in accordance with Roman religion, he ref |
ed that all Christians should sacrifice to the | Roman gods. |
Their bit-beasts are named after the Greek and | Roman gods. |
Ancient | Roman gold bracelet from the Hoxne Hoard, found in B |
Roman Gomola (born December 8, 1973) is a Czech bobs | |
Defeated | Roman Gotfryd (Poland) 5:0 |
bronze - | Roman Gotfryd - Belgrade 1978. |
He was rebuffed - | Roman government thought it was beneath them to make |
The | Roman government wanted Roman culture to flourish in |
Birley, Anthony (2005), The | Roman Government in Britain, Oxford University Press |
Roman Government's Response to Crisis, A.D. 235-337 | |
Said Herod, 'I am afraid of the [ | Roman] government.' |
Firmilian was the | Roman governor of the Iudaea Province, during the th |
Quintus Didius was a | Roman governor of the province Syria (31 BC to 29 BC |
Silva was | Roman governor of Iudaea from 73 to 81 AD. |
tion to Archelaus, Herod reconciled him to the | Roman Governor of Syria. |
known about him, but he seems to be the second | Roman governor(after Burdunellus) to try to usurp le |
Pontius Pilate: Portraits of a | Roman Governor, Interfaces (Collegeville, MN: Liturg |
the same time, the arrogant behaviour of some | Roman governors alienated the Mauri leaders, such as |
In fact, the | Roman governors of the area, Lupicinus and Maximus, |
sariye, which was a residential palace for the | Roman governors. |
The term limit on | Roman governors: again, this is not some radical new |
The | Roman Gradual (Latin Graduale Romanum) is an officia |
een and are other Gradual books apart from the | Roman Gradual. |
Roman graduated magna cum laude from Lehman College | |
His accountant was | Roman Grant and they went out on a trip where Orvill |
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