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682 | A Wisdom Archive on 682 |  | 682 A selection of articles related to 682 |  |
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ARTICLES RELATED TO 682 |  |  |  | 682: The Ultimate Guide to the Law of Attraction
What is the Law of Attraction?
Law
of attraction has many different labels, "Success consciousness",
"Law of Magnetism", "Power of Thought" etc.
What it says is; all your thoughts, all images in your mind,
and all the feelings connected to your thoughts will later manifest as your
reality. In other words; everything you have in your life - now - has been
attracted to you thru your mind.
This means that both the things you are happy with and those you
are not - is your own creation.
Most
importantly it means; you can from now on create your life consciously. You can
start attracting only those circumstances that creates happiness for you - and
leave out those you do not desire.
As The Law of Attraction is the most important law in the universe
- there is a lot to say about it! Here you will find over 100 links to articles
related to the Law of Attraction sorted under different topics. Indulge in all
the knowlwdge and inspiration and learn how to become your own Creator!
(See
also: Law of Attraction)
Read more here: » Law of Attraction: The Ultimate Guide to the Law of Attraction |
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 |  |  | 682: Encyclopedia - Wulfram of SensWulfram of Sens, Saint Wulfram is also known as Wulfram of Fontenelle. He lived from about 640 to March 20, 703, (though the years vary according to the authority, from birth in about 630, to death between 700 and 720). His life was recorded by the monk, Jonas of Fontenelle, eleven years after he died. However, nowadays, there seems to be little consensus about the precise dates of most events in his life and subsequently.
There are churches dedicated to him in Grantham, Lincolnshire, Ovingdean, Sussex and Abbeville, in the French département of Somme. Thi ...
Including:
Read more here: » Wulfram of Sens: Encyclopedia - Wulfram of Sens |
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 |  |  | 682: Encyclopedia - BedeBede (Latin Beda), also known as Saint Bede or, more commonly, the Venerable Bede (ca. 672 – May 27, 735), was a monk at the Northumbrian monastery of Saint Peter at Wearmouth (today part of Sunderland), and of its companion monastery, Saint Paul's, in modern Jarrow. He is well known as an author and scholar, whose best-known work, Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum (The Ecclesiastical History of the English People) gained him the title "The father of English History". Bede wrote on many other ...
Including:
Read more here: » Bede: Encyclopedia - Bede |
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 |  |  | 682: Encyclopedia II - Sicily - HistoryThe autochthonous peoples of Sicily, long absorbed into the population, were tribes known to Greek writers as the Elymians, the Sicani and the Siculi or Siceli. Of these, the last were clearly the latest to arrive on this land and were related to other tribes of southern Italy, such as the Italoi of Calabria, the Oenotrians, Chones, and Leuterni (or Leutarni), the Opicans, and the Ausones.
Sicily was colonized by Phoenicians and Punic settlers from Carthage and by Greeks, starting in the 8th century BC. The most important colon ...
See also:Sicily, Sicily - Towns and Cities, Sicily - Flag, Sicily - Arts, Sicily - History, Sicily - Sicilian people, Sicily - Sicilian language, Sicily - List of Sicilians, Sicily - List of Sicilian-Americans, Sicily - Notes Read more here: » Sicily: Encyclopedia II - Sicily - History |
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 |  |  | 682: Encyclopedia II - Table of Chinese monarchs - Han DynastyYuánguāng(元光)
Yuánshuò (元朔)
Yuánshòu (元狩)
Yuándǐng (元鼎)
Yuánfēng (元封)
Tàichū (太初)
Tiānhàn (天漢)
Tàishǐ (太始)
Zhēnghé (征和)
134 BC – 129 BC
128 BC – 123 BC
122 BC – 117 BC
116 BC – 111 BC
110 BC – 105 BC
104 BC – 101 BC
100 BC – 97 BC
96 BC – 93 BC
92 BC – 89 BC
Yuánfèng (元鳳)
80 BC – 75 BC
Dìjié (地節)
Yuánkāng (元康)
Shénjué (神 ...
See also:Table of Chinese monarchs, Table of Chinese monarchs - Xia Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Shang Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Zhou Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Qin Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Han Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Three Kingdoms Period, Table of Chinese monarchs - Jin Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Sixteen Kingdoms Period, Table of Chinese monarchs - Sovereignties established by Wu Hu, Table of Chinese monarchs - Northern and Southern Dynasties, Table of Chinese monarchs - Sui Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Tang Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms, Table of Chinese monarchs - Independent Regimes during Ten Kingdoms, Table of Chinese monarchs - Liao Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Song Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Western Xia, Table of Chinese monarchs - Jin Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Yuan Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Ming dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Shun Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Southern Ming Dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Qing dynasty, Table of Chinese monarchs - Taiping Rebellion, Table of Chinese monarchs - Yuan Shikai's Chinese Empire Read more here: » Table of Chinese monarchs: Encyclopedia II - Table of Chinese monarchs - Han Dynasty |
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 |  |  | 682: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Gwynedd - GovernmentAmong the more powerful of the early kings of Gwynedd were Cadwallon ap Cadfan who invaded Northumbria and briefly controlled it, and Rhodri the Great (844 - 878) who was able to add Powys and part of southern Wales to his realm, becoming the first ruler to control the greater part of Wales. On the other hand Howell the Good (942-950) of Deheubarth was able to annex Gwynedd to his own kingdom.
During the period of the Norman conquest of Wales, between the years 1066 and 1282, Gwynedd was a centre of national resistance, the last stron ...
See also:Kingdom of Gwynedd, Kingdom of Gwynedd - Government, Kingdom of Gwynedd - Administration, Kingdom of Gwynedd - End of Independence, Kingdom of Gwynedd - List of Kings/Princes, Kingdom of Gwynedd - Fictional reference Read more here: » Kingdom of Gwynedd: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Gwynedd - Government |
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 |  |  | 682: Encyclopedia II - King of the Britons - Kings of the Britons
King of the Britons - House of Troy.
Brutus I (Brute) 1149–1125 BC
Locrinus (Locrine) 1125–1105 BC
Queen Gwendolen 1105–1090 BC jointly with...
Maddan (Madan) 1105–1065 BC
Mempricius 1065–1045 BC
Ebraucus (Ebranck) 1045–1005 BC
Brutus II Greenshield 1005–993 BC
Leil 993–968 BC
Rud Hud Hudibras (Lud) 968–929 BC
Bladud (Blaedud) 929–909 BC
Leir (Lear) 909–855 BC (died 849 BC)
King of the Britons - House of Albany. ...
See also:King of the Britons, King of the Britons - Kings of the Britons, King of the Britons - House of Troy, King of the Britons - House of Albany, King of the Britons - House of Cornwall, King of the Britons - House of Troy, King of the Britons - House of Albany, King of the Britons - House of Cornwall, King of the Britons - House of Loegria, King of the Britons - House of Monmouth, King of the Britons - Kings Chosen by Lot, King of the Britons - House of Beldgabred, King of the Britons - Kings Chosen by Lot, King of the Britons - House of Capoir, King of the Britons - Anti–Roman Resistance Leader, King of the Britons - House of the Severi, King of the Britons - Usurping British Rulers, King of the Britons - Roman Commander, King of the Britons - House of the Votadini, King of the Britons - House of the Constantii, King of the Britons - House of the Gewissei, King of the Britons - House of the Votadini, King of the Britons - House of the Gewissei, King of the Britons - House of the Votadini, King of the Britons - House of the Dumnonii, King of the Britons - Usurping British Ruler, King of the Britons - House of Brittany, King of the Britons - House of the Gewissei, King of the Britons - House of Brittany, King of the Britons - House of the Dumnonii, King of the Britons - House of Brittany, King of the Britons - House of Dyfed, King of the Britons - House of Gwynedd, King of the Britons - House of Wessex, King of the Britons - House of Gwynedd, King of the Britons - Aftermath Read more here: » King of the Britons: Encyclopedia II - King of the Britons - Kings of the Britons |
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 |  |  | 682: Encyclopedia II - Liège city - HistoryThough some Roman settlements found place in Roman times. Liège was first recorded in writing in 558. Probably about 705, St. Lambert, who completed the conversion of the pagans in the region, was murdered at Liège, named at that time Vicus Leudicus, and he was popularly regarded as a martyr. His successor, St. Hubert, built, to enshrine his relics, a basilica which became the true nucleus of the city, and near which the residence of the bishops was fixed. The city, and the surrounding province, has been the capital of a prince-bishopric f ...
See also:Liège city, Liège city - Demographics, Liège city - Economy, Liège city - History, Liège city - Life in Liège, Liège city - Famous inhabitants, Liège city - External link Read more here: » Liège city: Encyclopedia II - Liège city - History |
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 |  |  | 682: Encyclopedia II - King of the Britons - Kings of the Britons
King of the Britons - House of Troy.
Brutus I (Brute) 1149–1125 BC
Locrinus (Locrine) 1125–1105 BC
Queen Gwendolen 1105–1090 BC jointly with...
Maddan (Madan) 1105–1065 BC
Mempricius 1065–1045 BC
Ebraucus (Ebranck) 1045–1005 BC
Brutus II Greenshield 1005–993 BC
Leil 993–968 BC
Rud Hud Hudibras (Lud) 968–929 BC
Bladud (Blaedud) 929–909 BC
Leir (Lear) 909–855 BC (died 849 BC)
Maglaurus, duk ...
See also:King of the Britons, King of the Britons - Kings of the Britons, King of the Britons - House of Troy, King of the Britons - House of Cornwall, King of the Britons - House of Loegria, King of the Britons - House of Monmouth, King of the Britons - Kings Chosen by Lot, King of the Britons - House of Beldgabred, King of the Britons - Kings Chosen by Lot, King of the Britons - House of Capoir, King of the Britons - Anti–Roman Resistance Leader, King of the Britons - House of the Severi, King of the Britons - Usurping British Rulers, King of the Britons - Roman Commander, King of the Britons - House of the Votadini, King of the Britons - House of the Constantii, King of the Britons - House of the Gewissei, King of the Britons - House of the Votadini, King of the Britons - House of the Gewissei, King of the Britons - House of the Votadini, King of the Britons - House of the Dumnonii, King of the Britons - Usurping British Ruler, King of the Britons - House of Brittany, King of the Britons - House of the Gewissei, King of the Britons - House of Brittany, King of the Britons - House of the Dumnonii, King of the Britons - House of Brittany, King of the Britons - House of Dyfed, King of the Britons - House of Gwynedd, King of the Britons - House of Wessex, King of the Britons - House of Gwynedd, King of the Britons - Aftermath Read more here: » King of the Britons: Encyclopedia II - King of the Britons - Kings of the Britons |
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 |  |  | 682: Encyclopedia II - History of anti-Semitism - Ancient animosity towards Jews3rd century BCE: Manetho, a Hellenistic Egyptian chronicler and priest, alleges that Moses was not a Jew, but an Egyptian renegade priest called Osarseph, and portrays the Exodus as the expulsion of a leper colony.
175 BCE-165 BCE: Antiochus Epiphanes sacks Jerusalem, calls Judaism "inimical to humanity", prohibits brit milah, confiscates copies of Torah and erects an altar to Zeus in the Second Temple after plundering it. (See also Maccabees, Hanukkah)
2nd century BCE: Mnaseas of Patros, a Greek author, reports that the Jews worship a donkey's head in the Holy of Holies. Thi ...
See also:History of anti-Semitism, History of anti-Semitism - Ancient animosity towards Jews, History of anti-Semitism - The 4th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 5th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 6th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 7th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 8th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 9th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 10th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 11th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 12th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 13th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 14th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 15th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 16th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 17th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 18th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 19th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 20th century, History of anti-Semitism - The 21st century, History of anti-Semitism - Books Read more here: » History of anti-Semitism: Encyclopedia II - History of anti-Semitism - Ancient animosity towards Jews |
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 |  |  | 682: Encyclopedia II - Bede - WorkHis works show that he had at his command all the learning of his time. It was thought that the library at Wearmouth-Jarrow was between 300-500 books, making it one of the largest in England. It is clear that Biscop made strenuous efforts to collect books on his extensive travels. Bede was proficient in patristic literature, and quotes Pliny the Younger, Virgil, Lucretius, Ovid, Horace, and other classical writers, but with some disapproval. He knew some Greek but no Hebrew. His Latin is generally clear and without affectation, and he was a skillful story-teller. However, his style can be considerably more obscure ...
See also:Bede, Bede - Life, Bede - Work, Bede - Historia Ecclesiastica, Bede - Other historical and theological works, Bede - Vernacular poetry Read more here: » Bede: Encyclopedia II - Bede - Work |
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 |  |  | 682: Encyclopedia II - Rasht - HistoryFor a more comprehensive treatment of the region, see the history section of Gilan.
Rasht was first mentioned in historical documents in 682 CE, but it is certainly older than this. It has seen the Sassanid era, the armies of Peter the Great and later Russian rulers, and British colonialism. The people of Rasht also played a major role in the Constitutional Revolution of Iran.
Rasht - Timeline.
682: Rasht is first mentioned in historical documents
1669: Stenka Razin, a Russian ...
See also:Rasht, Rasht - Geography and Climate, Rasht - People and culture, Rasht - History, Rasht - Timeline, Rasht - Notables of Rasht, Rasht - Suburbs Read more here: » Rasht: Encyclopedia II - Rasht - History |
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 |  |  | 682: Encyclopedia II - Liège city - HistoryThough some Roman settlements found place in Roman times. Liège was first recorded in writing in 558. Probably about 705, St. Lambert, who completed the conversion of the pagans in the region, was murdered at Liège, named at that time Vicus Leudicus, and he was popularly regarded as a martyr. His successor, St. Hubert, built, to enshrine his relics, a basilica which became the true nucleus of the city, and near which the residence of the bishops was fixed. The city, and the surrounding province, has been the capital of a prince-bishopric f ...
See also:Liège city, Liège city - Demographics, Liège city - Economy, Liège city - History, Liège city - Life in Liège, Liège city - Famous inhabitants Read more here: » Liège city: Encyclopedia II - Liège city - History |
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