「Roman」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)17ページ目
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It was embossed in 1866 in a raised | Roman letter type called Boston line letter. |
Roman Leybyuk (Tour de Ski 2010) | |
For the | Roman lieutenant of the same name, see Lupicinus (Ro |
of archaeological objects relating to everyday | Roman life in what was a major Roman City. |
A | Roman Life: Rutilius Gallicus on Paper and in Stone, |
Roman lighthouse at Dover Castle. | |
The | Roman lighthouse at Dover Castle. |
Brazda lui Novac is a | Roman limes in present day Romania, known also as Co |
artin Hussingtree, the A38 closely follows the | Roman line to beyond Bromsgrove. |
Laterculus Polemii Silvii, an Imperial | Roman list of emperors and provinces by Polemius Sil |
rmula "ever-Virgin Mary" used in the Greek and | Roman Liturgies. |
At its height in the 2nd century AD, | Roman London had a population of around 60,000. |
Roman London would not be consistant with the other | |
The site is outside the city limits of | Roman London (as was the usual Roman practice for bu |
Charles Roach Smith - Illustrations of | Roman London. |
During the war | Roman lost all his wealth and property. |
uable objects and artwoks found on the site of | roman Lyon (Lugdunum) like the Circus Games Mosaic, |
Roman Madyanov as Militsioner | |
"The | Roman Magistri in the Civil and Military Service of |
Two | Roman males on the Warren Cup, British Museum |
Borghese Venus, 2nd century BC | Roman marble copy of the Aphrodite of Cnidus (Capito |
It is a 1st - 2nd century AD | Roman marble copy of an original by Praxiteles. |
There is also a | Roman marching camp to the north-west of Ancaster. |
as a Gallic god invariably identified with the | Roman Mars. |
He was born | ROMAN MARTINEZ FERNANDEZ on May 9, 1910 at Santander |
Roman Martyn - guitars | |
The feast day of the | Roman martyr Felix is 29 July. |
Saint Gallicanus: | Roman martyr in Egypt, 363-363, under Julian the Apo |
Eugenia (died c AD 258) was an early Christian | Roman martyr whose feast day is celebrated on Decemb |
Theodora, was a | Roman martyr. |
He is mentioned in the | Roman Martyrology for January 1. |
they were included in earlier editions of the | Roman Martyrology (feast day 27 November) - though n |
In the | Roman martyrology of the Roman Catholic Church, he i |
In the | Roman martyrology they are commemorated on April 20. |
The official | Roman Martyrology for February 14 mentions only one |
The | Roman Martyrology states that four other wealthy mer |
Under that date the | Roman Martyrology records the names of all forty-nin |
The | Roman Martyrology lists only Faustus and Macarius wi |
Their feast day (as indicated in the | Roman Martyrology) is on 19 January. |
t Acacius' feast day is celebrated on April 9 ( | Roman Martyrology). |
He is not listed in the | Roman Martyrology, the official but incomplete list |
They appear in the | Roman Martyrology, the former on 24 December, the la |
ay, and he is the only Gabinus included in the | Roman Martyrology, the official though professedly i |
As well as the | Roman Martyrology, the Roman Missal identified the S |
He is mentioned also in the | Roman Martyrology, but has not been included in the |
She is not included in the | Roman Martyrology. |
he French Martyrology, and September 22 in the | Roman Martyrology. |
He is not listed in the | Roman Martyrology. |
of their properties and beheaded, according to | Roman Martyrology. |
Rufina and Secunda, | Roman martyrs |
John and Marcianus, were | Roman martyrs. |
conjectured that the cross is constructed from | Roman masonry (the nearby Piercebridge was once a Ro |
ison with later Medieval English Usages of the | Roman Mass |
setback, the moves against the ever-weakening | Roman masters resulted in Emperor Julian buying peac |
Although unexcavated, surface finds of | Roman material have been found within the confines o |
Roman Mathias "Lefty" Bertrand (February 28, 1909 - | |
The character is based on the | Roman matron Octavia Thurina Minor, sister of Roman |
There is a | Roman mausoleum in this town, as well as important a |
Roman mausoleum | |
The Knight and the | Roman, meanwhile, struggle with their own desperatio |
Hans Memling, Portrait of a Man with a | Roman medal. |
New Hiero-confessor Archpriest | Roman Medved of Moscow (1937) |
ROMAN MERCHANT... Russell Roberts | |
excavation at Ickham has revealed evidence of | Roman metalwork and copper broaches. |
is credited with introducing or advocating the | Roman method of dating the celebration of Easter. |
After that Ilir fought and defeated | Roman Mihocka, Luis Silva and Serbian Darko Krbanjev |
The road across the desert from Coptos was 258 | Roman miles long, or eleven days' journey. |
20 | Roman miles) from each other. |
There is also a remaining | Roman milestone still present in the village, at the |
The towns of Worms and Alzey go both back to | Roman military camps. |
It was made a | Roman military colony by the emperor Claudius, and a |
Sextus Vettulenus Cerialis was a | Roman military commander and subsequently the govern |
rsection of the River Penk and what became the | Roman military road known as Watling Street (today's |
For the | Roman military unit, see Maniple (military unit). |
at the mouth of the River Trym was used by the | Roman military forces passing in transit to Roman se |
ation at Chew Green has uncovered a complex of | Roman military camps consisting of a Roman fort, two |
ng on duty was itself a serious offence in the | Roman military. |
Two | Roman milliarium are exposed in a public garden next |
The | Roman Mind At Work, 1958 |
Davies, O. | Roman Mines in Europe 1935. |
Barnatt, J. 'Prehistoric and | Roman mining in the Peak District'. |
The 1973 | Roman Missal changed the first line of the hymn's st |
The 1962 | Roman Missal changed the rank of the feast from "Dou |
The 2002 typical edition of the | Roman Missal restored the celebration to the General |
nton calls James "the one heroic figure in the | Roman mission". |
hedral at Dorchester was founded in 634 by the | Roman missionary Saint Birinus. |
e Gallerinn auf der Rieggersburg: historischer | Roman mit Urkunden, Volumes 2-3 |
The remains of a | Roman Mithraeum and Nymphaeum are also found near th |
Roman Mitterer as Fritz | |
The | Roman Mole (Talpa romana) is a species of mammal in |
Acta Sanctae Sedis was a | Roman monthly publication containing the principal p |
Aydon lies near the course of the ancient | Roman monument, Hadrian's Wall. |
In the 18th-century, a | Roman mosaic was reported to have been found in the |
The City museum, including a notable | roman mosaic with the legend of Orpheus. |
for its fine collection of 2nd and 4th century | Roman mosaic floors and carvings, as well other Roma |
The Circus Games Mosaic is a 2nd century | Roman mosaic depicting a chariot race in quadrigas. |
Beneath its entrance steps is a | Roman mosaic. |
The | Roman Mosaics are composed of several hundreds of pi |
ctions include fossilised dinosaur footprints, | Roman mosaics and original Thomas Hardy manuscripts. |
The Esparragalejo Dam was a | Roman multiple arch buttress dam at Esparragalejo, B |
Roman Murray - Frank | |
In the town there is a | Roman museum dedicated to these findings, the Ochzet |
The Canterbury | Roman Museum houses Roman artifacts from across the |
Verovicium | Roman Museum, Housesteads Fort, Northumberland, Engl |
Vercovicium | Roman Museum, Housesteads, Northumberland, England. |
aic corridor panel from Durovernum, now in the | Roman Museum. |
The | Roman Mysteries combine Caroline's love of art histo |
nd she stars in the BBC programme for children | Roman Mysteries. |
The story is based upon the | Roman myth of Verginia. |
Appias ( | Roman mythology) |
In | Roman mythology, Stata Mater was the goddess who pro |
In | Roman mythology, she was called Necessitas ("necessi |
In Greek and | Roman mythology, Argyre was a mythical island of sil |
In | Roman mythology, Verminus was the Roman god who prot |
Mnestheus is a character from | Roman mythology, found in Virgil's Aeneid. |
and was reportedly visited by Hercules, in the | Roman mythology. |
Aurora is the goddess of dawn in | Roman mythology. |
It also refers to the | Roman name Cambodunum of the city Kempten, where Cha |
in The Doomsday Book as "Cheweshope" from the | Roman name of "Kyneshope" meaning Hollow Hill. |
“Aquilo” was the | Roman name for their god of the northwind. |
Devona, | Roman name for the river Don, Scotland. |
rtaken excavations as far away as Condate, the | Roman name for Northwich, in Cheshire. |
amed after the shortened form of Eboracum, the | Roman name for York. |
The | Roman name for Greta Bridge was Concangium. |
The | Roman name for Bowes was Lavatrae. |
The | Roman name for Bainbridge was Virosidum, the remains |
Watling Street, now the A5, is at High Cross ( | Roman name Venonis). |
Their capital acquired the | Roman name of Corinium Dobunnorum, which is today kn |
rchbishop of York is known as "Ebor", from the | Roman name for York: Eboracum. |
(The actual | Roman name for Cambridge was Duroliponte.) |
tymology of Quincy is thought to come from the | Roman name, domaine de Quintius. |
He was the son of a | Roman named Mauricius. |
The northern branch was originally a | Roman navigation channel called Turnbridgedike. |
The | Roman navy was totally destroyed, ending any hope of |
The Vandals decided to strike before the | Roman navy became unbeatable. |
He later was forced to run aground by the | Roman navy, and his ship was taken by Roman marines. |
There is also an extensive Greek and | Roman necropolis. |
Bolwieser (1931), | Roman; Neuausgabe 1964 unter dem Titel Die Ehe des H |
Roman Nights is a 2010 album by jazz trumpeter, comp | |
The other albums by this group are | Roman Nights, Prana Dance, and Light On. |
Roman Nikolayevich Romanov (Russian: Роман Николаеви | |
He came from a | Roman noble family. |
Prince Annibale Simonetti was a | Roman nobleman from 19th century Italy. |
traditional Jewish sources, he was a prominent | Roman nobleman, a nephew of the Roman emperor Titus. |
A practitioner of the | roman noir. |
The new | Roman nominee for a king was accepted virtually by e |
oden pilings beneath the lowest stratum of the | Roman north-south axis date the road's construction |
EG110CD: "Out-Side" (radio edit) / "Out-Side" ( | Roman Nose remix) |
British-type Border Leicesters sport a | Roman nose and upright ears |
Roman Nose opposed treaties with the United States F | |
Illustration for "Aquiline or | Roman Nose" from Notes on Noses |
Roman Nose, Fort Laramie, 1868. | |
For the Cheyenne warrior, see | Roman Nose. |
ictory at the Battle of Beecher Island against | Roman Nose. |
They have long, | Roman nosed faces with drooping ears. |
rative literature, in particular the Greek and | Roman novel. |
incised two strokes which could represent the | Roman number "II". |
Here is a listing with liber number, | Roman number, class, full title, and a short descrip |
This is part of a | Roman numeral series of stainless steel works housed |
On a canton Argent a | Roman numeral “X” of the first superimposed on a Rom |
In | roman numeral shorthand, the actual chords used in t |
In the apex the | Roman numeral "I" in black. |
Officially, the "I" is the | roman numeral "1". |
In 1970 the | Roman numeral clock was replaced by a Chinese clock. |
The M refers to the | Roman numeral for thousand. |
It is also the | roman numeral for 1700. |
For the | Roman numeral, see 111. |
Each revision was represented with a leading | Roman Numeral, while operating system revisions were |
It is represented by a | Roman numeral. |
o using notation of the form Chemical symbol - | Roman Numeral. |
Roman numerals represent which clade each Ketosyntha | |
Roman numerals in the pond of the fountain | |
Roman numerals denoted a Gruppe (Group) of a Geschwa | |
Also, the | Roman Numerals are wrong. |
ividual releases of The Annual were denoted by | roman numerals, from The Annual to The Annual IV. |
where the date is rendered in | Roman numerals. |
in return inclosed three battalions denoted by | Roman numerals. |
Perhaps it might look better with | Roman Numerals? |
It is named after Deiopea, a | Roman nymph. |
lsani was the only non-Italian Cardinal in the | Roman Obedience. |
Nonetheless several other | Roman objects have been uncovered in the area, inclu |
with or against the Romans, and thus acquiring | Roman objects and Roman ways of thinking in military |
nt by bar Kochba forces in the area, while the | Roman objects point to the settlement being overrun |
There is evidence of | Roman occupation throughout the parish. |
Scant traces of | Roman occupation have been found in many areas of th |
The | Roman occupation led to a Roman-Thracian syncretism, |
After | Roman occupation ended, around AD 350, the town deca |
The area was also occupied during the | Roman occupation of Britain. |
Francis Haverfield - The | Roman Occupation of Britain, being six Ford Lectures |
56 BC - | Roman occupation |
lture entered the historical record during the | Roman occupation as the Parisii tribe. |
During the | Roman occupation of Britain, Coddenham was the large |
Following the | Roman occupation, the site became in the beginning o |
Garn Boduan, a hillfort built soon after | Roman occupation, is located in the village. |
Putney was probably settled during the | Roman occupation. |
n the nearly 16 centuries since the end of the | Roman occupation. |
ecome an important figure in the resistance to | Roman occupation. |
Vestiges of | Roman occupation. |
Considerable evidence of | Roman occupation: villas and tombs, |
h punishments, and was in place at the time in | Roman occupied Palestine. |
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