「Roman」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)17ページ目
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St. John's is a private | Roman Catholic university. |
ce was raised in Dresden and received a strict | Roman Catholic upbringing. |
These strongly held beliefs derive from his | Roman Catholic upbringing. |
e Gallerinn auf der Rieggersburg: historischer | Roman mit Urkunden, Volumes 2-3 |
Plautus, the | Roman comedian, used this tale to present Amphitryon |
One | Roman piece uses a record six layers. |
Roman Antiquities, V, 1945. | |
Ursus of Solothurn was a 3rd century | Roman Christian venerated as a saint. |
Watling Street, now the A5, is at High Cross ( | Roman name Venonis). |
In | Roman mythology, Verminus was the Roman god who prot |
He was the brother of | Roman emperor Vespasian and uncle of emperors Titus |
thynia and later in Pontus during the reign of | Roman Emperor Vespasian who ruled in the Roman Empir |
Other examples include the | Roman goddess Vesta, and other hearth-goddesses, suc |
Iosif Malinovski, | Roman Catholic vicar and publisher |
Roman Catholic Vietnamese taking refuge in a French | |
The | Roman (Ihmiskunnan viholliset, 1964) |
Isurium may also have been the base of the | Roman Legio VIIII Hispana. |
An ancient theater and a | Roman peristyle villa have also been discovered on t |
Considerable evidence of | Roman occupation: villas and tombs, |
Saint Belina was a | Roman Catholic virgin martyr. |
The agger of the London-Lewes | Roman road, visible at Roman Road car park, Ashdown |
Roman Saenko- vocals, All Instrumentals | |
Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the | Roman Empire, vol. 3 |
nes, Power and the Ancient Economy, Journal of | Roman Studies, Vol. |
History of the later | Roman Empire, Vol. 2. New York (reprint). |
"F.W. Walbank", The Journal of | Roman Studies, Vol. |
Roman, 2 vols., Bremen: Schlodtmann 1851 | |
Roman Igorevich Voydel (Russian: Роман Игоревич Войд | |
This exposed the | Roman city wall that the medieval wall had been buil |
A surviving section of the | Roman city wall to the east of the Arch |
Large sections of the | Roman town walls are still in place, rising up to 5 |
The | Roman government wanted Roman culture to flourish in |
For the | Roman civil war battle, see Battle of Munda. |
Cardiff | Roman Fort was a coastal fort in the Roman province |
Communist candidate | Roman Grebennikov was elected as mayor with 32.47% o |
After Margaret married | Roman, Inga was treated coldly. |
Joseph II, Holy | Roman Emperor was present at the church's consecrati |
In 1791 | Roman Catholicism was legalised in England and St. M |
The archdiocese, created in | Roman times, was reestablished in 1118. |
The | Roman city was built on three small hills which over |
The Llantwit Major | Roman Villa was a Roman L-shaped courtyard villa loc |
Murphy, a | Roman Catholic, was buried at Calvary Cemetery in Ne |
The | Roman navy was totally destroyed, ending any hope of |
The seat of the Holy | Roman Emperor was Vienna. |
The | Roman Republic was short-lived, as the Papal States |
tion of the railway in the 1850s, an extensive | Roman graveyard was found. |
The | Roman city was rediscovered in 1859 when workmen beg |
In the 18th-century, a | Roman mosaic was reported to have been found in the |
The | Roman contus was also wielded two-handed. |
On the sea, a | Roman flotilla was captured by a Germanic one. |
In May 1985 the semi hexagonal wing of a | Roman villa was discovered in the Churchyard. |
Roman Gribbs was born in Detroit on December 29, 192 | |
His | Roman wife was Tassia. |
Flavius Belisarius, the famous | Roman general, was born in the town which preceded S |
That a | Roman Republic was a foretaste of wider expectations |
The | Roman force was completely overwhelmed and the legat |
The | Roman Empire was generally quite tolerant in its tre |
Their | Roman sojourn was decisive for the entire developmen |
From 364 to 375, the | Roman Empire was governed by two co-emperors, the br |
Furthermore, the capital of the | Roman state was not always the city of Rome. |
The longest | Roman aqueduct was that of Constantinople (Mango 199 |
During her career, | Roman religion was the focus of her research. |
(There is little evidence that | Roman rule was effective west of Exeter.) |
A | Roman kiln was discovered on ground near Northend Fa |
the coins, a finger ring, almost certainly of | Roman provenance, was also found. |
A | Roman encampment was found. |
Roman law was alive and well in the empire. | |
Longovicium (or Lanchester | Roman Fort) was an auxiliary fort on Dere Street, in |
North Leigh | Roman Villa was a Roman courtyard villa in the Evenl |
His son, General | Roman Abraham, was commandant of the Greater Poland |
Reclaimed | Roman stonework was used in the construction of the |
when Arbogastes had seized power and the West | Roman army was nearly completely in the hands of Fra |
A | Roman colony was subsequently sent to Antemnae by Ro |
In 2006 a | Roman Road was found while building the "Felin Hafre |
A hoard of 26 | Roman coins was found in Cholmondeston, suggesting t |
This seems to imply | Roman law was effectively dead worldwide and Justini |
Camerlengo of the Holy | Roman Church was at that time Corrado Caraccioli, bi |
Roman Ogaza was born 17 November in Katowice. | |
A | Roman camp was sited here, and a Roman road, the Lon |
In 1988 a | Roman theatre was discovered during building works n |
Newport | Roman Villa was a Romano-British farmhouse built in |
Roman Wales was the farthest point west that the Rom | |
Elginhaugh | Roman Fort was a Roman fort of the 1st century AD, l |
Even int the | Roman period was vine groving as the antiquarian art |
In 1886 a hoard of | Roman coins was dug up in the parish. |
Ancaster | Roman Town was a small town in the Roman province of |
Piercebridge | Roman Bridge was a Roman bridge, now ruined, over th |
irst episode of Spike's Deadliest Warrior, the | Roman Scissor was featured as one of the Roman gladi |
ormer Benedictine monastery of Sant Benet, the | Roman city was named in honour of Bacchus, the Roman |
Charterhouse | Roman Town was a town in the Roman province of Brita |
Eaton Hall and the | Roman road Watling Street are outside the village. |
It is believed that the | Roman Fosse Way forded the brook near the present La |
on the route of the St. Cuthbert's Way and the | Roman Heritage Way. |
f its length the A429 follows the route of the | Roman Fosse Way. |
(English) Data on The Cardinals of the Holy | Roman Church web site, at the page |
Alicia | Roman - weekends |
In 1849, six | Roman urns were dug up in the parish. |
the foundations of a | Roman Villa were excavated in 1975 during constructi |
In 1852, the remains of a | Roman settlement were found. |
Roman fortifications were excavated in the site of D | |
As of 1830, | Roman Catholics were allowed to vote and hold office |
nd and 1st centuries BC, games in honor of the | Roman emperor were added. |
During construction of the site | Roman artifacts were found from a roman road and are |
The | Roman remains were overlaid with evidence of a medie |
A few centuries later, small, hollow bronze | Roman dodecahedra were made and have been found in v |
While situated close to the " | Roman" Tongeren, a lot of traces from the Roman empi |
In 1856, the | Roman Catholics were given ground within the cemeter |
The | Roman forces were slaughtered; the Emperor Valens wa |
10 | Roman coins were discovered in December 2008, at a s |
However, | Roman settlements were not immediately abandoned. |
Roman discoveries were made in 1607 and 1823. | |
The | Roman authors were too quick to transmute peace into |
Celtic and | Roman ruins were found, some of which are being stil |
However it is believed that | Roman residences were to the west of the revealed ar |
Further | Roman remains were found in Peakirk Road near the ju |
Other | Roman Catholics were then granted the right to serve |
Augustine and Gregory to the | Roman Catholic Westminster Cathedral, which was cons |
arish of Fetteresso: lots of stuff, Neolithic, | Roman and whatever. |
The cave was still used in Classical Greek and | Roman eras, when the fertility goddess Artemis or he |
The use of the springs might even date back to | roman times when Braga was called Bracara Augusta. |
Its origins date back to the | Roman era when it was used for pagan purposes. |
ch dug to defend Calleva Atrebatum (Silchester | Roman Town) when the Anglo-Saxons began to settle th |
Extraction flourished under the | Roman period when the quarries near the ancient city |
origins of the settlement at Nantwich date to | Roman times when salt from Nantwich was used by the |
ry of Bordeaux wine spans almost 2000 years to | Roman times when the first vineyards were planted. |
The Hamlet, a | Roman town where a sculpture of the Roman god Mercur |
I spent all my childhood in | Roman district, where we still live. |
There are many churches on | Roman sites which are dedicated to St. Martin, the R |
He made a large collection of | Roman artefacts which is now displayed at Chesters M |
tinian I may have divorced Severa according to | Roman Law, which allowed for divorce (see Women in A |
running into the village from Wistanstow is a | roman road, which ran between the Roman settlements |
by two Junior schools, St Margaret Of Scotland | Roman Catholic which opened in 1960 to serve the lar |
The Pandects, a compendium of | Roman law which contains numerous excerpts from the |
He founded a church on the site of a | Roman temple which later became Cologne Cathedral. |
Nympsfield is on the path of a former | Roman road, which ran from Cirencester to Arlingham. |
Oshin favored a union of the Armenian and | Roman churches, which aroused no little popular disc |
Forum Novum was a new | Roman foundation which developed as a forum or marke |
The Camlet Way - the | Roman Road which runs south-west from Verulamium (St |
near the mouth of the river Ubus, it became a | Roman colonia which prospered and became a major cit |
ys later was the Province's capital during the | Roman era, which also comprised Cyrnaica (ancient Li |
From the 2000 census, 6,339 or 37.0% were | Roman Catholic, while 5,313 or 31.0% |
On January 26, 1866 | Roman died while walking down Dumaine Street. |
From the 2000 census, 3,220 or 35.5% were | Roman Catholic, while 3,297 or 36.3% |
Each revision was represented with a leading | Roman Numeral, while operating system revisions were |
A devout | Roman Catholic, White was a member of the Pontifical |
This is a family tree of all the Eastern | Roman Emperors who ruled in Constantinople. |
scentinus is traditionally said to have been a | Roman soldier who converted to Christianity. |
genus was named for Marcus Terentius Varro, a | Roman scholar who was also a beekeeper. |
They were all soldiers in the | Roman Army, who lost their positions for being chris |
The real Gaius Julius Caesar was a | Roman general who seized control of the Roman govern |
owever, have the friendship of Henry III, Holy | Roman Emperor, who even confirmed the false diploma. |
Asterius of Caesarea was a | Roman senator, who became a Christian martyr. |
Roman Polanski, who was nominated for the fourth tim | |
pielberg tried to pass the project to director | Roman Polanski, who turned it down. |
In Athletics, the nation was represented by | Roman Cress who ran in the Men's 100 metres. |
This article is about the | Roman woman who lived at Vindolanda. |
t Ararat were, according to a medieval legend, | Roman soldiers who, led by Saint Acacius, converted |
Marinus of Caesarea was a | Roman soldier, who, for being a Christian, suffered |
The star of TV theme tunes was | Roman Tam, whose singing earned much praise. |
Marcianus was a | Roman Senator, whose son John died of unknown causes |
Eugenia (died c AD 258) was an early Christian | Roman martyr whose feast day is celebrated on Decemb |
uess of Bute's translation into English of the | Roman Breviary will make clear from the above descri |
Calvert's replacement for Talbot was another | Roman Catholic, William Joseph, who would also prove |
Most populous religious group were | Roman Catholics with 1,334 (99.5%). |
Wine Tales: Un | Roman Devin with Richard Caddel - Galloping Dog Pres |
Map of | Roman Palestine with the Decapolis cities labeled in |
rm Romano-Germanic describes the conflation of | Roman culture with that of various Germanic peoples |
ence, the king of the Caeninenses entered upon | Roman territory with his army. |
Most populous religious group were | Roman Catholics with 1,392 (99.2%). |
e and the River Trent lie an extensive area of | Roman fields with associated villa. |
The celebration was restored to the General | Roman Calendar with the 2002 Roman Missal, assigned |
"Light a | Roman Candle with Me" - 3:05 |
tle of the album comes from the track "Light a | Roman Candle with Me." |
Most populous religious group were | Roman Catholics with 327 (99.4%). |
Its origins go back to prehistoric Iberian and | Roman times, with some remainders in its area. |
Only three | Roman helmets with a covering over the face have bee |
The City museum, including a notable | roman mosaic with the legend of Orpheus. |
The name was appropriate as Janus was a | Roman god with two faces. |
e are many parallels from Spanish mines of the | Roman period with similar stone anvils. |
settlement on the present site since at least | Roman times with both flints and a Roman sarcophagus |
Roman Britain, with Stane Street in red | |
Most populous religious groups were | Roman Catholics with 6,595 (92.4%) and Protestants w |
Meanwhile, Crassus entertains the | Roman patricians with a lavish entertainment, includ |
Our Lady Help of Christians & St Denis ( | Roman Catholic) with its high steeple. |
Most populous religious group were | Roman Catholics with 2,551 (96.4%). |
Munnu withdrew his opposition, and adopted the | Roman system with the rest of southern Ireland. |
Most populous religious group were | Roman Catholics with 2,019 (98.4%). |
The most populous religious groups were | Roman Catholics with 3,600 (96.6%) and Protestants w |
Neville is a | Roman Catholic with a devotion to St. Jude, to whom |
He divided the Western | Roman Empire with Odoacer. |
After the | Roman administrative withdrawal, the temple became a |
he bridge was destroyed by Aurelian, after the | Roman Empire withdrew its troops from Dacia. |
Ancient road another | Roman road within Tarsus. |
II appointed him on 31 January 2004 as Dean of | Roman Rota within the Roman Curia. |
Cowbridge was a small castra in | Roman Wales within the Roman province of Britannia S |
r XIII)) was a small town and probable fort in | Roman Wales within the Roman province of Britannia S |
Although a firm | Roman Catholic, Wolfgang strove for reconciliation w |
She co-directed the 1995 excavations of the | Roman siege works at Masada. |
Roman Serov works on her jumps. | |
Roman London would not be consistant with the other | |
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