「aristocracy」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 180件
han Tatars, Balkars, Bashkirs and Mongolian | aristocracy adopted the Kipchak language in the days of |
In 774 Husayn conspired with the Yemenite | aristocracy against the emir, proclaiming the rule of t |
e to his native Cappadocia to stir up local | aristocracy against Skleros, who had revolted against i |
a successful resistance of the old Frisian | aristocracy against the rise of the Cirksena family, wh |
her, the chiefess Namokuelua, was of Oahuan | aristocracy, although not of high rank. |
fs and his way of life; the German-speaking | aristocracy among which he had moved and his native cou |
The presence of a Turkic | aristocracy among the Hungarians could explain the Byza |
evolution as, 'a merciless conflict between | aristocracy and democracy' laying heavy emphasis on the |
minent representatives of Bohemia patriotic | aristocracy and Enlightened middle-class intellectuals |
century it had become fashionable among the | aristocracy and was often included in tonadillas, zarzu |
nd redistribution of the estates of the old | aristocracy and social equality. |
is reason, Ceirano contacted members of the | aristocracy and finance Turin in order to form a compan |
il (which represented the Swazi traditional | aristocracy) and the European Advisory Council (represe |
abitants of Adrianople rebelled against the | aristocracy and declared themselves for the regency, wi |
is father was a former member of the Korean | aristocracy and a military officer serving the Joseon D |
", with Anglo-Norman as the language of the | aristocracy, and any standard written English became a |
over 30 books, many of them on the British | aristocracy and the great houses of England, Scotland a |
had traditionally been divided between the | aristocracy and the king. |
more inimical to the working class than the | aristocracy' and hence he supported universal manhood s |
nment] out of a mixture of these [monarchy, | aristocracy, and democracy], as to give to this Kingdom |
had been placed under the interdict and the | aristocracy and clergy had fled to Frankfurt am Main, w |
neta, who were eminent members of the Roman | aristocracy and descendents of Pope Boniface VIII. |
d the CSA in the back: blacks, the Southern | aristocracy, and the Whig Party. |
iece); unlike some other groups the English | aristocracy and middle class were not self-consciously |
y, and received the support of the official | aristocracy and a section of the clergy. |
These represent democracy, | aristocracy, and monarchy respectively. |
atrician family belonging to the provincial | aristocracy and integrated into the aristocracy of Tuni |
The Dutch also interned the pro-Republican | aristocracy and their supporters. |
ent policy was impossible with a rebellious | aristocracy and a king of indolent character. |
He has also written about the British | aristocracy and worked as a translator. |
Liberal ideals were coming from the upper | aristocracy and the middle classes. |
mally reserved for formal offices of state, | aristocracy and church. |
him to hide his connections with the former | aristocracy and seek governmental appointments. |
e mainly chiefs of fiefdoms, and formed the | aristocracy and landed gentry of the area. |
The school became popular amongst the local | aristocracy and many OAs went onto to successful career |
Victoria fit in within the Russian | aristocracy and the circle of her mother in law Grand D |
She married a member of the Polish | aristocracy, and retired from the stage for six years f |
used his contacts to gain stories about the | aristocracy and other public figures. |
h of the classes, including the Church, the | Aristocracy and the rising bourgeoisie, have characters |
attended by well-to-do bourgeois, the lower | aristocracy, and foreign visitors. |
1960's, he married a member of the Swedish | aristocracy and they raised their family in Westchester |
na tells him that she is descended from the | aristocracy and can only marry someone of noble birth. |
" that resided in the manors of the gentile | aristocracy, and managed their agricultural estates. |
one of the noblest men among the Byzantine | aristocracy, and might have succeeded to the throne in |
draw on cultural perceptions of a decadent | aristocracy, and depict an upper-class murderer or murd |
ularized Zen in the circles of new military | aristocracy and, mastering variety of literary genres r |
Traditional functions of the | aristocracy are undermined by their hypocrisies, contem |
ron and Beaton were members of the Scottish | aristocracy, as were a number of other Rectors and Preb |
mbly included members of the clergy and the | aristocracy, as well as representatives from the variou |
f Bavaria, and was regarded by the Bavarian | aristocracy as an effective intermediary during the tur |
atter in his campaign against the governing | aristocracy at Carthage at the close of the First Punic |
atter in his campaign against the governing | aristocracy at Carthage at the close of the First Punic |
uth preferred to the values of the Fujiwara | aristocracy at the end of the Heian period. |
alogy that traces the origins of the Merina | aristocracy back to the god-king Andrianerinerina. |
and the Norfolk gentry, but for the greater | aristocracy based in London. |
Corn Laws were supported by the land-owning | aristocracy, because by reducing foreign competition th |
ered a class privilege of the sword-bearing | aristocracy before the formation of the modern centrali |
The lower house, or, the peers and | aristocracy: being a complete key to the House of Commo |
er life centered around glamorous events of | aristocracy, but she was arrested in October 1793 along |
nsion of electoral power on the part of the | aristocracy, but this is not the typical view of contem |
duced to the highest echelons of the French | aristocracy by his only sister Anastasia Ivanovna, Land |
Galician conservative Polish landowners and | aristocracy called the "Podolians", they gained a polit |
re representatives met of the four estates: | aristocracy, clergy, burghers and peasants . |
iety would then be directed by a hereditary | aristocracy composed of descendants from the Crusaders, |
to see whether the traditional power of the | aristocracy could hold sway against the might of growin |
The Corbodan | aristocracy created a council to governate the city in |
For his losses and troubles, the Moorish | aristocracy did not support Nasr I. |
Born into the | aristocracy, Douglas-Pennant became interested in youth |
s of Philadelphia while others entered into | aristocracy during the nineteenth century with their pr |
enry and the barons, who had tasted rule by | aristocracy during Henry's minority. |
father, Hadrian, who belonged to the Roman | aristocracy, entrusted his education to his relative, B |
err's character was a member of the Mexican | aristocracy escaping the vengeance of the Mexican Revol |
tish and International royalty and European | aristocracy; famous clients have included Sienna Miller |
here, the traditional wooden houses of the | aristocracy feature a central pillar (andry) supporting |
, which they interpreted as the red for the | aristocracy for him and black for the religious (The Mi |
Of a family from the Scots | aristocracy, Grant, the youngest of eight brothers, was |
tempt to kill King James and the Protestant | aristocracy had been foiled. |
ting city in Europe and many of the British | aristocracy have rented homes there. |
he time, Han Fei was a member of the ruling | aristocracy, having been born into the ruling family of |
t, insofar as being a member of the finance | aristocracy, he has no direct interest in productive en |
m, according to Nancy Mitford's The English | Aristocracy, he would regularly feed roast beef and Yor |
Always a center of entertainment for the | aristocracy, in the 1870s it was a regular destination |
A review of "Emperor and | Aristocracy in Japan, 1467-1680: Resilience and Renewal |
o be of the land owning upper class of Indo | aristocracy in the Dutch East Indies. |
Cemetery of the | aristocracy in the 19th century, it also received the r |
Chamber-pots were used by | aristocracy in Europe, where there was often a need to |
in sacrificial rites, and songs used by the | aristocracy in their sacrificial ceremonies or at banqu |
It was occupied by local | aristocracy including the Evans family, ancestors of au |
involved with other members of the English | aristocracy, including Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Ca |
terms with powerful members of the British | aristocracy, including the Duke of Buccleuch and Lord B |
the House of Lords, on the basis that 'the | aristocracy is dead' and 'because then it would be clea |
The Byzantine | aristocracy, IX to XIII centuries (BAR International Se |
The | aristocracy, jagirdars and deshmukhs (wealthy landowner |
d the Normans and opponent of the pro-papal | aristocracy, led by the papal constable Landulf of Grec |
ch as dusty old wine cellars of the British | aristocracy left from one generation to another. |
religiously and morally from a reactionary | aristocracy; like Heyse and unlike Freytag he saw the h |
The royal class and | aristocracy live in the centre of the town. |
A powerful | aristocracy lived in it, whose primary mission was to a |
s associations with the French monarchy and | aristocracy made him a likely target. |
ty was rapidly falling from favour with the | aristocracy, making the demise of the house more or les |
cubicles and cross-dressing members of the | aristocracy masturbating rent boys in taxi cabs, not to |
Bleak House, the sinister solicitor to the | aristocracy Mr Tulkinghorn has his offices in Lincoln's |
The station was often used by the | aristocracy, notably Queen Victoria when she visited Ca |
y of the old nobility and the rise of a new | aristocracy of wealth, and he gives an indignant accoun |
eland, and the extensive penetration of the | aristocracy of Scotland by Norman and other French-spea |
Green | Aristocracy of Norman England p. 132 |
Green | Aristocracy of Norman England p. 213 |
The | Aristocracy of Norman England, (Cambridge, 1997) |
also a social success with royalty and the | aristocracy of Britain. |
example of the architectural trends of the | aristocracy of Ponce. |
lso contain language that was meant for the | aristocracy of the day as well. |
Most of the emirs, as the powerful landed | aristocracy of the sultanate, supported Kaykaus. |
He married Folchaid, of the | aristocracy of Alemannia, to build diplomatic ties ther |
chao princes or administrators replaced the | aristocracy of Tai overlords. |
He was born into the Dutch | aristocracy of Albany, New York. |
Maidams are tumuli of the royalty and | aristocracy of the medieval Ahom Kingdom (1228-1826) in |
This led to friction with the | aristocracy of the southern provinces (modern-day Belgi |
ews of the curative mud quickly reached the | aristocracy of Saint Petersburg, the capital of the Rus |
woman; in appearance representative of the | aristocracy of the age. |
edici has reached a leading position in the | aristocracy of the Kingdom of Two Sicilies. |
amboyantly in costumes inspired by European | aristocracy of the 18th century. |
e Ponce stands as a reminder of the welathy | aristocracy of southern Puerto Rico in the late 19th an |
lished a book on health and diet called The | Aristocracy of Health. |
The medieval | aristocracy on Mount Athos |
uffix was modified to a "y" to annotate the | aristocracy or nobility of someone from the village. |
sitions of power, whether these people were | aristocracy or company CEOs. |
n policy, who was fighting against the high | aristocracy power, which was supported during his fathe |
being recognised in history as the warrior | aristocracy, prior to this they were designated by the |
rtunistic intellectuals who allied with the | aristocracy, rather than pursuing truth. |
oved to Baku, she charmed the city with her | aristocracy, refinement and philanthropy. |
his successes in Prussia, where the landed | aristocracy remained powerful, were viewed with concern |
hivalry: Education of the English Kings and | Aristocracy, Routledge, ISBN 0416748309 |
ient Rome in the 12th century, the medieval | aristocracy saw itself mirrored in the accounts of anci |
esides a number of portraits of the Spanish | aristocracy, some of which were sent to the exhibition |
This was around the same time that an | aristocracy speaking Urartian, similar to old Hurrian, |
, and, in the time of Edward I, the English | aristocracy spoke Norman French, not English (some vers |
o the attention of the country and soon the | aristocracy started to arrive to partake in them. |
become a fashionable hotel for the Georgian | aristocracy taking the waters. |
took up the usage in an essay, “The English | Aristocracy”, that was published by Stephen Spender in |
ssals of mammoth establishments of a monied | aristocracy that threatens annihilation to anyone who q |
t was so far removed from that of the local | aristocracy that the succeeding Anne family appear not |
had a spirit too independent for the petty | aristocracy that surrounds most country towns - his pol |
Much of the enlightened | aristocracy that for one reason or another had been per |
The land being carved up by the Norman | Aristocracy, the land playing host to 'Schertune' was g |
oups forming an organic whole: the military | aristocracy, the clergy, and ordinary people. |
communal village lands by the land-holding | aristocracy, the so-called dynatoi ("strong ones"), in |
l mere which gave the village and its local | aristocracy, the Hanmer family, their name, Chirk featu |
eactionary forces based in the royalty, the | aristocracy, the army, and the peasants. |
House of Stuart survive amongst the British | aristocracy; the Clan Stuart of Appin, the Earls Castle |
to satisfy the needs of the newly enriched | aristocracy; they brought with them classical ideas of |
ka, of placing loyalists within the Kandyan | aristocracy to aide and enhance colonial governance. |
Members of the Roman | aristocracy travelled to Bormio in order to enjoy warm |
erits and had no family ties with the Roman | aristocracy, used the marriage of his daughters to stre |
le to people from the south of England, the | aristocracy was primarily Danish in origin, and the Ang |
of the wooden architecture of the Highlands | aristocracy, was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in |
The | aristocracy was entirely on the side of Peter. |
The | aristocracy was once again in a very strong political a |
Heian | aristocracy were expected to express gloom and sorrow a |
ranged in influence, but the Viking warrior | aristocracy were particularly inspired by Thor's feroci |
He thought the manners of the British | aristocracy were very democratic in comparison to the J |
from an old military family or the Prussian | aristocracy, which had traditionally dominated the Germ |
o between the anti-unionists and the Danish | aristocracy, which in other aspects was opposed to King |
This is his nucleus, his 'order', his new | aristocracy, which is to permeate England: a little coh |
s a member of that faction of the Bulgarian | aristocracy, which sought to establish peaceful relatio |
His appointment was made to please the | aristocracy which, under Matthew Bonnellus, had murdere |
society of second or third sons of English | aristocracy who inherited land grants or land in Virgin |
sically remained in the hands of the feudal | aristocracy, who governed affairs in their fiefs. |
, was a nun and a member of the Merovingian | aristocracy who died in Paris about 600, leaving a will |
d Parliament, and the landowning gentry and | aristocracy who controlled the rural areas and mostly s |
but this failed due to opposition from the | aristocracy whose members refused to have the front gat |
powerful force on the battlefield, and thus | aristocracy with wealth enough to own a horse became th |
Members of the Roman | aristocracy, with the support of the German king Henry |
He amused the | aristocracy with parties and courtly hunts with which h |
ily was an established part of the Scottish | aristocracy with Lord Minto being head of the family wh |
ed a collecting passion for instance at the | aristocracy, with which each tried to exceed the other |
d'Oulx has been a destination for the Turin | aristocracy, with its famous winter resort Sportinia an |
would have been void, but only amongst the | aristocracy would such a full family tree be known. |
The | aristocracy would retreat to pastoral settings to cavor |
ugh the Locrian code distinctly favored the | aristocracy, Zaleucus was famous for his conciliation o |
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