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752

A Wisdom Archive on 752

752

A selection of articles related to 752

More material related to 752 can be found here:
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752
752, 752, 752 - Births, 752 - Deaths, 752 - Events

ARTICLES RELATED TO 752

752: Encyclopedia - 752

752 - Events. Pope Stephen II, pope for 3 days in March. Pope Stephen III, succeeded Stephen II. Retired Emperor Shōmu takes part in the dedication ceremony of the great statue of Vairocana Buddha at the Todaiji temple and declares himself a Buddhist. 752 - Births. Irene, empress of the Byzantine Empire 752 - Deaths. March 14: Pope Zacharias ca. March 26: Pope Stephen II Li ...

Including:

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752: Encyclopedia - Irene empress

Saint Irene (Greek: Ειρήνη) (c. 752 - August 9, 803) was a Byzantine empress (although she called herself basileus(βασιλεύς), the male form of the word "emperor," rather than βασίλισσα basilissa, "empress") from 797 to 802. She was the wife of Leo IV. Originally a poor but beautiful Athenian orphan, she speedily gained the love and confidence of her feeble husband, and at his death in 780 was left by him sole guardian of th ...

Read more here: » Irene empress: Encyclopedia - Irene empress

752: Encyclopedia - List of popes

For a graphical representation of this list, see list of popes (graphical). This is a list of Popes of the Roman Catholic Church. While the term "Pope" (Latin: papa "father'") is used in several churches to denote their high spiritual leaders, this title in English usage generally refers to the supreme head of the Roman Catholic Church. The title itself has been used officially by the head of the Roma ...

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Read more here: » List of popes: Encyclopedia - List of popes

752: Encyclopedia - Nibelung

German Nibelung and the corresponding Old Norse form Niflung (Niflungr) refers in most of the German texts and in all the Old Norse texts to the royal family or lineage of the Burgundians who settled at Worms. The vast wealth of the Burgundians is often referred to as the Niblung or Niflung hoard. In some German texts Nibelung appears instead as one of the supposed original owners of that hoard, either the name of one of the kings of a people known as the Nibelungs, or in variant form Nybling, as the name o ...

Including:

Read more here: » Nibelung: Encyclopedia - Nibelung

752: Encyclopedia - Childeric III

Childeric III "the Idiot" amd also called the Phantom King (died about 752), king of the Franks, was the fourteenth and last king of the Merovingian dynasty. He is the son of Chilperic II. The throne had been vacant for seven years when the mayors of the palace, Carloman and Pepin the Short, decided in 743 to recognize Childeric as king. We cannot say whose son he was, or how he was related to the Merovingian family. He took no part in public business, which was directed, as previously, by the mayors of the ...

Read more here: » Childeric III: Encyclopedia - Childeric III

752: Encyclopedia II - List of Lands of the Carolingian Empire - From the Treaty of Verdun until the death of Charles the Fat 843–888

Kingdom of Aquitaine (843–860). (containing regions of: Aquitaine, Auvergne, Gascony, Septimania (844–860)) Kingdom of the Central Franks (843–855). Containing: Kingdom of Burgundy Kingdom of Italy regions of: Alsace, Burgundy, Friuli, Frisia, Lombardy, Lorraine, Papal States, Provence, Romania, Spoleto, Tuscany Kingdom of Burgundy (855–863). (containing regions of: Burgundy, Provence) < ...

See also:

List of Lands of the Carolingian Empire, List of Lands of the Carolingian Empire - Prior to the formation of the Empire 751–800, List of Lands of the Carolingian Empire - From the formation of the Empire until the Treaty of Verdun 800–843, List of Lands of the Carolingian Empire - From the Treaty of Verdun until the death of Charles the Fat 843–888, List of Lands of the Carolingian Empire - After the death of Charles the Fat in 888

Read more here: » List of Lands of the Carolingian Empire: Encyclopedia II - List of Lands of the Carolingian Empire - From the Treaty of Verdun until the death of Charles the Fat 843–888

752: Encyclopedia II - Count of Paris - Orléanists

The title was revived much later and was used by three claimants to the French throne: Louis-Philippe, Comte de Paris (1838-1894): French Orleanist monarchists referred to him as "Louis-Philippe II", and then later when Henri, comte de Chambord died, he was recognized as the royalist heir by almost all French monarchists, and was occasionally known as Philippe VII. Henri, Comte de Paris (1908-1999) Henri, Comte de Paris, Duc de France (born 1933) The title was given by Louis-Philippe I to his grandson Philippe, as show of gratitude towards the City of Paris and in refe ...

See also:

Count of Paris, Count of Paris - Pippinids, Count of Paris - Girardids, Count of Paris - Welfs, Count of Paris - Robertians, Count of Paris - Bouchardids, Count of Paris - Orléanists

Read more here: » Count of Paris: Encyclopedia II - Count of Paris - Orléanists

752: Encyclopedia II - Santa Maria sopra Minerva - History

Details of the ruined temple to Minerva, built by Pompey about 50 BCE, referred to as Delubrum Minervae are not known. A temple to Isis and a Serapeum may also underlie the present basilica and its former convent buildings, for in 1665 an Egyptian obelisk was found, buried in the garden of the Dominican cloister adjacent to the church. There are other Roman survivals in the crypt. The ruined temple is likely to have lasted until the reign of Pope Zacharias (741-752), who finally Christianized the site, offering it to Eastern monks. Th ...

See also:

Santa Maria sopra Minerva, Santa Maria sopra Minerva - History, Santa Maria sopra Minerva - Minerva's chick, Santa Maria sopra Minerva - Major artworks, Santa Maria sopra Minerva - Other churches with this name

Read more here: » Santa Maria sopra Minerva: Encyclopedia II - Santa Maria sopra Minerva - History

752: Encyclopedia II - State Roads in Florida - History

Prior to the 1945 renumbering, State Roads were given numbers in the order they were added to the system. The 1945 renumbering removed a lot of roads that had never been built and added some that had not existed prior to 1945. Until the early 1980s, the Florida Department of Transportation continued to add State Roads to the system. At some point, they began to classify roads into primary, secondary, and local roads. Primary roads would continue to be state-maintained. Secondary roads would have an S before the number, and would only be state-maintained during a construction project. Local ...

See also:

State Roads in Florida, State Roads in Florida - History, State Roads in Florida - Interrupted State Roads, State Roads in Florida - List of State Roads, State Roads in Florida - Interstates, State Roads in Florida - U.S. Routes, State Roads in Florida - Toll roads

Read more here: » State Roads in Florida: Encyclopedia II - State Roads in Florida - History

752: Encyclopedia II - Exarchate of Ravenna - The Exarchate

The exarchate was organised into a group of duchies (i.e the Duchy of Rome, Duchy of Venetia, Duchy of Calabria, Lucania, Spoleto etc) which were mainly the coastal cities in the Italian peninsula since the Langobardos or Lombards held the advantage in the hinterland. The civil and military head of these imperial possessions, the exarch himself, was the representative at Ravenna of the emperor in Constantinople. The surrounding territory reached from the boundary with Venice in the north to the Pentapolis at Rimini, the border of the ...

See also:

Exarchate of Ravenna, Exarchate of Ravenna - Introduction, Exarchate of Ravenna - The Exarchate, Exarchate of Ravenna - The End of the Exarchate, Exarchate of Ravenna - Exarchs of Ravenna

Read more here: » Exarchate of Ravenna: Encyclopedia II - Exarchate of Ravenna - The Exarchate

752: Encyclopedia II - 72 number - In mathematics

Seventy-two is the sum of four consecutive primes (13 + 17 + 19 + 23), as well as the sum of six consecutive primes (5 + 7 + 11 + 13 + 17 + 19). 72 is a Harshad number and a pronic number. In normal space, the exterior angles of an equilateral pentagon measure 72 degrees each. There are 17 solutions to the equation φ(x) = 72, more than any integer below 72, making it a highly totient number. ...

See also:

72 number, 72 number - In mathematics, 72 number - In science, 72 number - In other fields

Read more here: » 72 number: Encyclopedia II - 72 number - In mathematics

752: Encyclopedia II - Standing law - United States

The Supreme Court of the United States has stated, “In essence the question of standing is whether the litigant is entitled to have the court decide the merits of the dispute or of particular issues.” Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 498 (1975). There are a number of requirements that a plaintiff must establish in order to have standing before a federal court. Some are based on the case and controversy requirement of the judicial power of Article Three of the United States Constitution, § 2, cl.1. As stated there, “The Jud ...

See also:

Standing law, Standing law - United States, Standing law - Constitutional requirements, Standing law - Prudential limitations, Standing law - Recent development of the doctrine

Read more here: » Standing law: Encyclopedia II - Standing law - United States

752: Encyclopedia II - Japanese art - History of Japanese Art

Japanese art - Jomon art. The first settlers of Japan, the Jōmon people (c 11000–c 300 BC), named for the cord markings that decorated the surfaces of their clay vessels, were nomadic hunter-gatherers who later practiced organized farming and built cities with population of hundreds if not thousands. They built simple houses of wood and thatch set into shallow earthen pits to provide warmth from the soil. They crafted lavishly decorated pottery storage vessels, clay figurines called dogu, and crystal jewels ...

See also:

Japanese art, Japanese art - History of Japanese Art, Japanese art - Jomon art, Japanese art - Yayoi art, Japanese art - Kofun art, Japanese art - Asuka and Nara art, Japanese art - Heian art, Japanese art - Kamakura art, Japanese art - Muromachi art, Japanese art - Azuchi-Momoyama art, Japanese art - Art of the Edo period, Japanese art - Meiji Art, Japanese art - Postwar period, Japanese art - Modern Art in Japan, Japanese art - Performing arts, Japanese art - Aesthetic concepts, Japanese art - Artists, Japanese art - Art schools, Japanese art - Government art sponsorship, Japanese art - Private sponsorship and foundations, Japanese art - Notes

Read more here: » Japanese art: Encyclopedia II - Japanese art - History of Japanese Art

752: Encyclopedia II - Nibelung - Niblung genealogy

Nibelung - Lex Burgundionum. In the Lex Burgundionum, issued by the Burgundian king Gundobad (c. 480–516), it is decreed that those who were free under the kings Gibica, Gundomar, Gislaharius, and Gundaharius will remain free. But as will be seen below, legendary tradition often makes Gibiche or Gjúki (that is Gibica) the father of Gunther/Gunnar and names Giselher (the same name as Gislaharius) as one of Gunther/Gunnar's brothers. In Norse tradition another brother is named Gutthom (Gutþormr ...

See also:

Nibelung, Nibelung - In Waltharius, Nibelung - Norse tradition, Nibelung - Niblung genealogy, Nibelung - Lex Burgundionum, Nibelung - German tradition, Nibelung - Norse tradition, Nibelung - Other interpretations of Nibelung, Nibelung - A northern people, Nibelung - Referring to dwarfs, Nibelung - Variant spellings

Read more here: » Nibelung: Encyclopedia II - Nibelung - Niblung genealogy

752: Encyclopedia II - List of popes - Notes on numbering of popes

Hermannus Contractus may have been the first historian to number the popes continuously. His list ends in 1049 with Pope Leo IX as the number 154. On that basis, the current Pope Benedict XVI is the 265th pope. A number of anomalies in the list given above need further explanation: Felix II (356-357), Boniface VII (974, 984-985), John XVI (997-998), Benedict X (1058-1059) and Alexander V (1409-1410) are not listed because they are considered antipopes. The numbering of popes named Felix has been amended to omit a ...

See also:

List of popes, List of popes - List of popes, List of popes - AD 30-250, List of popes - AD 250-500, List of popes - AD 500-750, List of popes - AD 750-1000, List of popes - AD 1000-1250, List of popes - AD 1250-1500, List of popes - AD 1500-1750, List of popes - AD 1750-2000, List of popes - From AD 2000, List of popes - Notes on numbering of popes

Read more here: » List of popes: Encyclopedia II - List of popes - Notes on numbering of popes

752: Encyclopedia II - Du Fu - Life

Traditionally, Chinese literary criticism has placed great emphasis on knowledge of the life of the author when interpreting a work, a practice which Watson attributes to "the close links that traditional Chinese thought posits between art and morality" (p. xvii). This becomes all the more important in the case of a writer such as Du Fu, in whose poems morality and history are so prominent. Another reason, identified by the Chinese historian William Hung, is that Chinese poems are typically extremely concise, omitting circumstantial factors ...

See also:

Du Fu, Du Fu - Life, Du Fu - Early years, Du Fu - War, Du Fu - Chengdu, Du Fu - Last years, Du Fu - Works, Du Fu - History, Du Fu - Moral engagement, Du Fu - Technical excellence, Du Fu - Influence, Du Fu - Translation

Read more here: » Du Fu: Encyclopedia II - Du Fu - Life

752: : Popular Topic Pages II - 17

This is a sitemap for popular topic pages at Global Oneness. Click on a link and you will find multiple articles related to the topic:

 

Alternative Health Dictionary , Hinduism Dictionary , Spiritual Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary , Parapsychology Dictionary, Paganism Dictionary,
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752: Encyclopedia II - State Roads in Florida - Interrupted State Roads

While most Florida State Roads are contiguous, there is a relative handful of routes that have interruptions in their designations. The most famous of the set is SR A1A, which exists in seven separate pieces along the Atlantic coast from Fernandina Beach to Key West. State Road 2 has two sections separated by the State of Georgia. The western segment extends westward from Georgia 91 as it crosses the Chattahoochee River and has its western terminus at SR 81 near Sweet Gum Head; the eastern segment crosses the ...

See also:

State Roads in Florida, State Roads in Florida - History, State Roads in Florida - Interrupted State Roads, State Roads in Florida - List of State Roads, State Roads in Florida - Interstates, State Roads in Florida - U.S. Routes, State Roads in Florida - Toll roads

Read more here: » State Roads in Florida: Encyclopedia II - State Roads in Florida - Interrupted State Roads

752: Encyclopedia II - Nibelung - Norse tradition

In the eddic poem Atlakvida, the word Niflungar is applied three times to the treasure (arfr) or hoard (hodd) of Gunnar (the Norse counterpart of German Gunther). It is also applied once to Gunnar's warriors and once to Gunnar himself. It elsewhere appears unambiguously as the name of the ligneage to which the brothers Gunnar and Högni (Hǫgni) belong and seems mostly interchangeable with Gjúkingar, meaing descenda ...

See also:

Nibelung, Nibelung - In Waltharius, Nibelung - Norse tradition, Nibelung - Niblung genealogy, Nibelung - Lex Burgundionum, Nibelung - German tradition, Nibelung - Norse tradition, Nibelung - Other interpretations of Nibelung, Nibelung - A northern people, Nibelung - Referring to dwarfs, Nibelung - Variant spellings

Read more here: » Nibelung: Encyclopedia II - Nibelung - Norse tradition

752: Encyclopedia II - Exarchate of Ravenna - The End of the Exarchate

During the 6th and 7th centuries the growing menace of the Lombards and the Franks, and the split between eastern and western Christendom caused by Iconoclasm and the acrimonious rivalry between the Pope and the patriarch of Constantinople, made the position of the exarch more and more untenable. Ravenna remained the seat of the exarch until the revolt of 727 over Iconoclasm. The last exarch of Ravenna was killed by the Lombards in 751. The exarchate was reorganized as the catapanate of Italy headquartered in Bari ...

See also:

Exarchate of Ravenna, Exarchate of Ravenna - Introduction, Exarchate of Ravenna - The Exarchate, Exarchate of Ravenna - The End of the Exarchate, Exarchate of Ravenna - Exarchs of Ravenna

Read more here: » Exarchate of Ravenna: Encyclopedia II - Exarchate of Ravenna - The End of the Exarchate

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