「padua」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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363 | Padua a Main belt asteroid. |
The team from the University of | Padua also hoped to reconstruct his cranium in order |
rrocchio in two famous equestrian monuments in | Padua and Venice. |
truck" Italy on September 11, 2077, destroying | Padua and Verona and sinking Venice. |
He studied at | Padua and Bologna, received in 1529 from his older b |
She married a professor at the university of | Padua, and became active there as his colleague. |
is Professor of Astronomy at the University of | Padua, and works at the Asiago Observatory. |
Menochio was born at | Padua, and entered the Society of Jesus on 25 May 15 |
t to secondary school in Feltre and studied in | Padua and Innsbruck, then the capital of the Crownla |
He was educated at the Universities of | Padua and of Rome. |
trinal dispute with the papacy by Marsilius of | Padua, and later by the English Franciscan friar and |
movements, particularly strong in Rome, Milan, | Padua and Bologna, but at its height in 1977 was als |
f the Cassinese Congregation of St. Justina of | Padua: and to them did grant, impart and assign all |
He then studied in the University of | Padua, and graduated as doctor of medicine. |
He studied at | Padua and became member of the Dominican Order. |
His last years were spent in | Padua, and they were clearly difficult. |
d Europe, including Brussels, Augsburg, Milan, | Padua and Venice. |
is next clubs were Noicom Cuneo, Sempre Volley | Padua and then Mlekpol AZS Olsztyn. |
ello (born 1951) is professor at University of | Padua and teaches Public opinion sciences. |
He was professor of botany at | Padua, and director of the botanical garden there. |
He went to | Padua and then to Venice, taking his bank along with |
There and in | Padua and Bologna, cities with well-established bota |
Saints William of Aquitaine, Clare, Anthony of | Padua and Francis (1517-1518) - National Gallery, Lo |
sprudence, he graduated from the University of | Padua, and entered the magistracy in 1980 as a prose |
Between 1456 and 1472 he lived in | Padua and Bologna, where he may have studied further |
he settlement is dedicated to Saint Anthony of | Padua and belongs to the Suhorje Parish. |
He studied at Buda and | Padua, and became tutor to the children of Alexander |
He had the scholars Marsilius of | Padua and William of Ockham rendered an opinion that |
war, the real Perlasca returned to his home in | Padua and never spoke about his war-time experiences |
at part spent in preaching at Bologna, Venice, | Padua and Verona. |
He received a medical degree in surgery from | Padua, and furthered his studies at Bologna and Pavi |
ovara, Brescia, Triest, Monza, Turin, Bologna, | Padua and Piacenza. |
of the Scottish branch of the family, died in | Padua, and Claud succeeded him as heir-male. |
servatory, La Silla Observatory, University of | Padua, and Trieste Astronomical Observatory. |
h in medicine and in philosophy at Bologna and | Padua, and was styled the second Aristotle. |
nica Maltauro, he studied at the University of | Padua and was then nominated assistant in the depart |
or much of his career he practiced medicine in | Padua, and is considered one of the great physicians |
But in | Padua and in Naples he came in contact with the Soci |
the author of a life (1604) of St. Anthony of | Padua, and versions of two odes of Horace bear witne |
Rosso in Milan, I Volsci in Rome, Autonomia in | Padua and A/traverso in Bologna. |
s teacher of classics at the Jesuit college in | Padua, and then went to Rome, where he completed his |
His experience in | Padua and Venice was essential for developing his st |
rs who were gathered by Alberto della Scala in | Padua and Verona between around 1330 and 1345. |
f the Italian Republic, an honorary citizen of | Padua, and received the Golden Lion Award at the Ven |
, also called Santorio Santorii, Sanctorius of | Padua, and various combinations of these names, was |
Barbarigo (1687), who came from the diocese of | Padua, and who gave great assistance after the earth |
He pursued his studies at | Padua, and is said to have spoken about sixteen lang |
ies and law at the universities of Bologna and | Padua and becoming a notary. |
He was born in | Padua, and worked through the ranks at the basilica |
He was educated at | Padua, and studied mathematics at the University of |
vernment conferred upon him a professorship at | Padua, and he achieved distinction as a poet on the |
ad, Agilulf invaded Imperial Italy, destroying | Padua and capturing Monselice. |
ies including Portomaggiore, Codigoro, Rovigo, | Padua and finally Venice on 2 May 1945. |
t a young age he received the archdiaconate of | Padua and the Abbey of St. Crisogonus in Zadar. |
several neighbouring cities, notably Vicenza, | Padua and Treviso, and came to be regarded as the le |
subject so much that he was made professor at | Padua, and then at Pisa before returning to Bologna, |
He studied in | Padua around the years 1501 to 1506, receiving his d |
He studied at the University of | Padua, as a student of Prodocimo de Conti and Giovan |
the Chair in Mathematics at the University of | Padua, as the successor of Giovanni Poleni. |
He is the patron saint of his adopted home of | Padua, as well as of his native Lisbon, not to menti |
ter College under Thomas Langton, and later at | Padua, at Bologna, and probably at the University of |
The Cardinal died in | Padua, at age 64. |
Marchetto da Padova (Marchettus of | Padua; b. 1274?; fl. |
e also became a professor at the university of | Padua, becoming its rector from 1932 to 1943. |
He attended the seminaries in Vicenza and | Padua before being ordained to the priesthood by Bis |
ony's nut, for Anthony the Great or Anthony of | Padua, both patron saints of swineherds. |
Osimo Cathedral; in 1565 he took a position in | Padua briefly, but took a more important position in |
ome, he returned to Bologna, whence he went to | Padua, but in 1521, induced by offers of preferment |
In 1679 Montanari moved to a teaching post in | Padua, but almost all records of this period of his |
n January 30, 1932, he was appointed Bishop of | Padua by Pope Pius XI. |
6 the church was dedicated to Saint Anthony of | Padua by order of Philip II of Spain. |
pel consecrated in the same year to Anthony of | Padua by the administrator of the abbey Charles Casp |
He sudied in University of | Padua canon and civil law. |
This event, run by St. Anthony of | Padua Catholic Church, closes down six blocks in the |
The St. Anthony of | Padua Catholic Church, founded in the spring of 1879 |
for which he served in that capacity were the | Padua Chamber Orchestra, with which he toured the Un |
The original St. Anthony of | Padua Church was built in 1725 by the local Italian |
St. Anthony of | Padua Church, alternatively known as the Sant'Antoni |
Having grown up in Australia, he attended | Padua College, where he played in the First XI as Go |
Shrine of The Little Flower and St. Anthony of | Padua) combined themselves into Mother Mary Lange Ca |
The Parroquia San Antonio de | Padua, commonly known as the Iglesia de Curridabat i |
Students to represent Russia in a the Student | Padua Cup taking place in Padua, Italy. |
Hermitage of San Antonio de | Padua de la Tuna near Isabela, Puerto Rico dates fro |
Gino Ferrer Callegari (born April 14, 1911 in | Padua; died April 14, 1954 in Genoa of leukemia) was |
Antonio Busini (born July 5, 1904 in | Padua; died August 20, 1975 in Riccione) was an Ital |
He died in | Padua during a plague. |
The station is owned by the St. Anthony of | Padua Educational Association. |
London, and then traveled to Italy to study at | Padua, famous for its 16th century Medieval herb gar |
He studied at Bologna, | Padua, Florence and Rome, and by his learning attrac |
9 she was elected President of the Province of | Padua for The People of Freedom. |
h Barbara Degani, President of the Province of | Padua for The People of Freedom. |
us in 1840 and taught philosophy at Brixen and | Padua for many years. |
g the Death and Canonization of St. Anthony of | Padua for the San Petronio Basilica at Bologna. |
ile in Straubing also painted Saint Anthony of | Padua for the Franciscan church there. |
99 he was elected President of the Province of | Padua for Forza Italia (party which he had joined in |
Maria Isabel Antonietta de | Padua Francisca Januaria Francisca de Paula Juana Ne |
He played High School Hockey at | Padua Franciscan High School in Parma, Ohio and four |
Padua Franciscan High School is a private co-educati | |
Founded in 1961 as a private school for boys, | Padua Franciscan became co-educational in 1983 and i |
Democrat, he was President of the Province of | Padua from 1985 to 1990. |
rugia from 1577 to 1579; and the University of | Padua from 1579 to 1581. |
he Roman Catholic Church, serving as Bishop of | Padua from 1949 to 1982. |
s carpenter carved an image of Saint Antony of | Padua from a block of wood. |
Roman Catholic Church who served as Bishop of | Padua from 1882 until his death and was elevated to |
Covi, who was candidate for Mayor in | Padua, gained 1.8%. |
ing from one Jesuit college to another, Milan, | Padua, Genoa, and then back in Milan. |
After having studied medicine at | Padua he decided to become a painter and architect. |
A native of | Padua, he debuted for the Italian national team on M |
At Bologna, and later at | Padua, he studied mathematics and philosophy, and, i |
hen despite earlier interest from Italian club | Padua he was persuaded to sign as a professional for |
At | Padua he studied law, and was ordained a priest. |
At | Padua he studied anatomy under Girolamo Fabrici. |
he university of Perugia and the university of | Padua, he graduated as a doctor of law at Padua. |
Feast day of Saint Anthony of | Padua, held on the 2nd Sunday in July, during which |
also founded a college for unwealthy Greeks at | Padua in 1653. |
nally decided to send a different officer from | Padua in order to put the blame on left-wing anarchi |
said to have been awarded the title Doctor in | Padua in 1469. |
n in Vicenza he graduated at the University of | Padua in law and worked as lawyer, when Vicenza was |
He died in the city of | Padua, in the Veneto, northern Italy. |
erial forces had captured the Venetian city of | Padua in June 1509. |
He moved to the University of | Padua in 1613 and began studies in Medicine until 16 |
Vitaliano Donati (1717-1762), born in | Padua in Italy, was an Italian doctor, archeologist, |
is a comune (municipality) in the Province of | Padua in the Italian region Veneto, located about 50 |
is known about him prior to his appearance in | Padua in 1567 as an organist at Crosieri Cathedral. |
From there, she ventured to | Padua in the Republic of Venice, where she died on 1 |
e professor of Philosophy at the University of | Padua in 1633. |
a in the period 1851-54, received his Ph.D. in | Padua in 1856. |
In | Padua, in 1683, the Jews were in great danger becaus |
were interred at the church of San Antonio de | Padua in the small town of Uquia. |
astronomical clock in the Piazzi dei Signori, | Padua in 1344 - one of the first of its type. |
y graduated in medicine from the University of | Padua in 1656 Finch and Baines returned to Christ's |
tely 4 km south of Conselve in the Province of | Padua in the Italian region of Veneto. |
ought in Italy; its main body surrendered near | Padua in May 1945. |
He died at | Padua in 1508. |
San Giorgio in the church of Sant' Antonio at | Padua, in 1377. |
ed first in Antwerp and then into a villa near | Padua, in Italy. |
church Saint Anthony of | Padua in Essen |
Founded in | Padua in 1959 by Claudio Scimone, it has made a repu |
d a professor of theology at the University of | Padua in 1881 in a time when a reaction to idealism |
He died at | Padua in Italy. |
s led by Giampaolo Piotto of the University of | Padua in Italy investigated Hubble Space Telescope i |
lled during the same year at the University of | Padua in Science of Education, where she graduated i |
He was bishop of | Padua in 1524, bishop of Narbonne in 1551, bishop of |
nst the Venetians in the unsuccessful siege of | Padua in 1509. |
named by Father Boeddeker for Saint Anthony of | Padua, include the St. Anthony Dining Room (1950), t |
The meaning is "Bartolomeo Cristofori of | Padua, inventor, made [this] in Florence in [date]." |
Ivone De Franceschi (born January 1, 1974 in | Padua) is an Italian former football player. |
po "Pippo" Maniero (born September 11, 1972 in | Padua) is an Italian retired football (soccer) playe |
to "Albertino" Bigon (born October 31, 1947 in | Padua) is an Italian football manager and former pla |
n February 23, 1979 in Cittadella, Province of | Padua) is an Italian professional road bicycle racer |
gelo in Rome by its castellan, Antonio Rido of | Padua, is recounted by Machiavelli |
Novella Calligaris (born 27 December 1954 in | Padua) is an Italian retired swimmer, and the first |
Federico Carraro (born June 23, 1992 in | Padua) is an Italian footballer who plays for the yo |
born March 13, 1969 in Cittadella, Province of | Padua) is a former Italian volleyball player, who ea |
rn 28 March 1975 in Camposampiero, Province of | Padua) is an Italian racing driver who shared the FI |
In | Padua it supported the municipal government led by F |
f the story the action moves from 17th Century | Padua, Italy to 21st Century London. |
iotto di Bondone, c. 1305 (Cappella Scrovegni, | Padua, Italy). |
nd 13th century in Paris (France), Bologna and | Padua Italy, and later also in Oxford and Cambridge |
She was born in | Padua, Italy, and became a Clarisse (Poor Clare) nun |
and in 1946 and 1947 continued his studies in | Padua, Italy. |
born in Pochinok, Smolensk Oblast and died in | Padua, Italy. |
Magic Brain, Perugi Artecontemporanea, | Padua, Italy. |
Domenico Agostino Vandelli ( | Padua, July 8, 1735 - Lisbon, June 27, 1816) was an |
und and Music Computing") at the University of | Padua, Kunitachi College of Music in Tokyo, and Cata |
In addition he wrote his first opera in | Padua, La morte d'Orfeo. |
July 7 - Elba de | Padua Lima, Brazilian footballer and manager |
oiler and was named for Mission San Antonio de | Padua located near Jolon, California. |
he following year she took second place at the | Padua Marathon. |
sor of constitutional law at the University of | Padua), Maria Gomierato (UDC, former Mayor of Castel |
He died in Venice and was buried in | Padua next to Rabbi Judah Minz, rabbi of Padua. |
diocese, Bortignon was translated to Bishop of | Padua on April 1, 1949. |
convicted for war crimes by a British court in | Padua, on a charge of complicity with the mass execu |
ussels, professor at the school of medicine at | Padua, on the fabric of the Human body in seven Book |
Throne on August 24, 1882, and named Bishop of | Padua on September 25 of that same year, whilst reta |
He executed paintings of St. Anthony of | Padua, one for the parish church of Santa Cruz, and |
Born in either | Padua or Bologna, he trained supposedly with Vitale |
Also that year, University of | Padua presented him with the Provincia di Treno Euro |
a description of a persecution of the Jews at | Padua, probably of the same one of which the work of |
It was revised for the Teatro Nuovo in | Padua probably on 13 June 1786, this time omitting t |
In December 1585 he was fired from his job in | Padua, probably because of an unexcused absence, but |
He did his studies at | Padua, receiving there the habit of the recently-fou |
oduced the first performance of The Duchess of | Padua, retitling it Guido Ferranti and taking on the |
d adjacent buildings, including St. Anthony of | Padua Roman Catholic Church and a large group of gar |
St. Anthony of | Padua Roman Catholic Church is a historic church at |
Early 1900s - The | Padua scarlet was officially adopted by hunt staff a |
in the early 1950s and attended St. Anthony of | Padua school in The Bronx. |
In the sack of | Padua soon after Minz's death almost all of his writ |
, including figures of St Joseph, St Antony of | Padua, St Diego, St Pedro Mentara, St Franciscus and |
Benedictine Order at the Abbey of St Justina, | Padua, taking the religious name "Augustine", but il |
ing the invasion there was Bishop Tricidius of | Padua, that took refuge on the island of Metamaucus. |
He was born in | Padua, the son of noted astronomer Antonio Abetti. |
In 1648 he founded in | Padua the |
n in Brescia, to Tuscan parents, he studied in | Padua then traveled to Venice, Modena, and Genoa. |
When Tricidius returned to | Padua there still remained a bisphoric see at Metama |
during confinement, and similar to Anthony of | Padua, to find lost articles. |
in a number of European cities (Vienna, Halle, | Padua) to continue his studies, while in 1803 he neg |
the main conduits of Luzzatto's teachings from | Padua to Eastern Europe. |
At the age of 16, he moved to | Padua to study law - a field of study not chosen by |
to Germany as papal legate with the Bishop of | Padua to mediate between the rivals Emperor Henry IV |
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