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- King Arthur (22450 bytes)
1: ... Welsh texts often call him ''amerauder'' ("[[emperor]]").
5: ...he west of what would become [[England]], but controversy over the centre of his power and the extent ...
7: ...ho was active during the reign of the [[Roman Emperor]] [[Anthemius]]. Unfortunately, Riothamus is a s...
9: ...red for centuries afterward. Yet the obscurity surrounding the historical career of Artorius makes thi...
13: ...ther Roman Briton of the period, for example [[Ambrosius Aurelianus]], led the forces battling the Sax... - Relic (11473 bytes)
1: The word '''relic''' comes from the Latin ''reliquiae'' ('remains') and there ar...
7: ...leshly body, or that God chooses to do miracles through the sleeping bodies of His holy servants, or b...
11: ...the True Cross to build a [[ship]] from. The [[Shroud of Turin]] is another relic whose authenticity ...
13: ====Romano-Christian [[daemon]]s and the "virtue" of rel...
14: ... [[Gregory of Tours]] Ernest Brehaut analyzed the Romano-Christian concepts that gave relics such a po... - Ponce De Leon (5480 bytes)
2: ...he Spanish Crown. He is regarded as the first [[Europe]]an known to have visited what is now the [[Uni...
4: ...er exposure to the European diseases the sailors brought with them and to which the natives had no imm...
7: ... won his rights. Ponce de León was then removed from office in 1512 and felt his good name had been d...
9: ...and personal enrichment, not a physical rebirth through the waters of the Fountain of Youth. The Taino...
11: ...as made in [[New York]] in 1882 using the bronze from English Cannons seized after the English attacke... - Alexandria (28378 bytes)
1: ...opus (Egypt)|Canopus]]. It has a population of approximately 3,341,000.
3: ... of antiquity. However, upon the founding of [[Cairo]] by Egypt's mediæval Islamic rulers its st...
13: ...ding of the city and ends with the arrival of the Romans (blue).
14: * The Roman era from [[80 BC]] until the arrival of the Arabs in [[64...
15: * The Arab city from [[641]] until [[1798]] when Napoleon arrived (ye... - List of popes (77758 bytes)
2: This is a '''list of Popes of the Roman Catholic Church'''.
4: ...tself has been used officially by the head of the Roman Catholic Church since the tenure of [[Pope Sir...
6: ...[metropolitan bishop|Metropolitan]] of the Roman Province'' and ''[[Servus Servorum Dei|Servant of the...
21: | rowspan="2" | '''[[Pope Peter]]'''<br><small>Saint P...
23: | rowspan="2" | <small>Simon Peter</small><br>'''—... - Roman Empire (59037 bytes)
1: {{Roman Empire infobox}}
3: ...gustan state is conventionally described as the [[Roman Republic]], since the structure of the power i...
5: ...n [[476]], when [[Odovacar]] deposed the last Emperor and sent the Imperial insignia to [[Constantinop...
7: ...gably throughout this article to mean the same as Roman Empire.
9: ...ed, and displays of imperial majesty were common from the earliest days of the Empire. - Venice (22017 bytes)
2: ...timate 2004-01-01). The city stretches across numerous small islands in a marshy [[lagoon]] along the ...
6: ...y anti-Eastern character emerged, leading to the growth of autonomy and eventual [[independence]]. Ven...
8: ...rom Verona in 1178, opening a lifeline to silver from Germany; the last autocratic doge, Vitale Michie...
10: ...s [[Bergamo]], [[Brescia]], and [[Verona, Italy|Verona]] rallied to the defence of Venetian sovereignt...
12: ...d the [[Latin Empire]]. Considerable plunder was brought back to Venice, including the [[Mark the Evan... - Vatican City (21873 bytes)
1: ...he [[Holy See]], the ecclesiastical seat of the [[Roman Catholic Church]] and its [[Eastern Rite]].
3: ...eads of Government are concurrently agents of the Roman Curia.
5: The city takes its name from ''Mons Vaticanus'', also known as [[Vatican Hill...
7: ...cing=0 width=300 style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaaaaa solid; border-co...
10: ... border=0 cellpadding=2 cellspacing=0 style="background:#f9f9f9; text-align:center;" - List of philosophers (79981 bytes)
5: *[[Pietro d'Abano]], (1250?-1316)
11: *[[John Abercrombie]], (1780-1844)
16: *[[Alessandro Achillini]], (1463-1512)
21: *[[Robert Adams (philosopher)|Robert Adams]], (born 1937){{fn|O}}
22: *[[Robert Adamson]], (1852-1902) - Rome (33048 bytes)
2: ...cing=0 width=300 style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaaaaa solid; border-co...
3: |+ style="font-size: larger;"|'''Roma'''
8: |align="center" width="140px"|[[Image:Rome city flag.png|100px]]
9: |align="center" width="140px"|[[Image:Roma01.jpg|100px|]]
15: ...dash; [[SPQR]]''<br>(The Senate and the People of Rome)</small> - George W. Bush (64926 bytes)
1: ...former President [[George H. W. Bush]]), and his brother ([[Jeb Bush]], the current [[Governor of Flor...
19: ...ntial election, 2000#Florida election results|controversial and close]] [[U.S. presidential election, ...
22: ..., and [[Dorothy Bush|Dorothy]] (a younger sister, Robin, died of leukemia in [[1953]] at the age of th...
25: ..., scoring 77 percent (with no As and one D, in astronomy) with a [[grade point average]] of 2.35 out o...
27: ...ment to serve until [[May 26]], [[1974]]. He was promoted once, to [[first lieutenant]], on the Novemb... - Roman commerce (14626 bytes)
1: ...hile being at the same time part of its backbone. Romans were businessmen and the longevity of their e...
3: ...d minor uprisings, they gave a distinct flavor to Roman commerce.
5: ... tallying of [[Ancient Roman weights and measures|Roman measures]].
9: ... the soldiers and paid cash for any booty coming from military activities.
11: ...of around the 3rd century AD,. Itinerant pedlars (rochel) took spices and perfumes to the rural popula... - Padua (12961 bytes)
1: [[Image:Mar04565.JPG|thumb|280px|Tronco Maestro Riviera: a pedestrian walk along a section of the...
2: ...s branches of the [[Bacchiglione]], which once surrounded the ancient walls like a [[moat]].
7: ...o' Miretto]] and [[Stefano da Ferrara]], working from [[1425]] to [[1440]].
9: ...ith its great door, the work of [[Falconetto of Verona]], [[1532]].
11: ...cast in [[1453]], the first full-size equestrian bronze cast since antiquity.
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