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863

A Wisdom Archive on 863

863

A selection of articles related to 863

More material related to 863 can be found here:
Index of Articles
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863
863

ARTICLES RELATED TO 863

863: Encyclopedia - Code page

Code page is the traditional IBM term used for a specific character encoding table: a mapping in which a sequence of bits, usually a single octet representing integer values 0 through 255, is associated with a specific character. Code page - Background. A few code pages use more than 8 bits per character and thus encode more than 256 characters. The term cmap (character map) is used in technical documentation on Macintosh platforms. Although IBM created and maintained many code pages, the term ...

Including:

Read more here: » Code page: Encyclopedia - Code page

863: Encyclopedia - Constantine I of Scotland

Constantine I (Causantín mac Cináeda) (836-877), son of King Kenneth I of Scotland, became King of Scots and King of the Picts in 863 when he succeeded his uncle Donald I of Scotland. Constantine was a warrior king. During his reign he spent most of his days fighting off the vikings or trying to expand the Kingdom of Scotland into the south. In 872 his assassination of 'Rhun' (Arthgal), King of Strathclyde, and his brother-in-law, meant that the southern ...

Read more here: » Constantine I of Scotland: Encyclopedia - Constantine I of Scotland

863: Encyclopedia - Czech and Slovak Orthodox Church

The Czech and Slovak Orthodox Church (Czechoslovak Orthodox Church up to 1993) traces its roots to the Church of the Czech Brethren of the 1920s. It was first headed by Matej Pavlik, consecrated as Bishop Gorazd by the Serbian Orthodox Church, under whose authority the Church operated. (The Czech and Slovak Orthodox Church is now autocephalous, or self-governing.) Almost all of the members of the Czech and Slovak Orthodox Church were 20th-century converts from Roman Catholicism or Eastern Rite Catholicism (Uniates). The ...

Including:

Read more here: » Czech and Slovak Orthodox Church: Encyclopedia - Czech and Slovak Orthodox Church

863: Encyclopedia - Xanten

Xanten is a town in the North Rhine-Westphalia state of Germany, located in the district of Wesel. Xanten - Geography. Xanten is made up of three districts: Hochbruch, Niederbruch and the city centre. More localities, which belong to the city of Xanten, are divided into 6 urban districts: Birten, Lüttingen, Marienbaum, Vynen (with Obermörmter), Wardt (with Mörmter and Willich) and Xanten (with Beek and Ursel). Parts of a protected area called Bislicher Insel belong to the city. The city is limited ...

Including:

Read more here: » Xanten: Encyclopedia - Xanten

863: Encyclopedia - August 5

August 5 is the 217th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (218th in leap years), with 148 days remaining. August 5 - Events. 642 - Battle of Maserfeld - Penda of Mercia defeats and kills Oswald of Bernicia 1100 - Henry I crowned King of England in Westminster Abbey 1305 - William Wallace, who led Scottish resistance to England, is captured by the English near Glasgow and transported to London for trial and execution. 1583 - Sir Humphrey G ...

Including:

Read more here: » August 5: Encyclopedia - August 5

863: Encyclopedia - Aghlabid

The Aghlabid dynasty of emirs, members of the Arab tribe of Bani Tamim, ruled Ifriqiya (northern Africa), nominally on behalf of the Abbasid Caliph, for about a century, until overthrown by the new power of the Fatimids. Aghlabid - Aghlabid rulers. Ibrahim I ibn al-Aghlab ibn Salim (800-812) Abdullah I ibn Ibrahim (812-817) Ziyadat Allah I ibn Ibrahim (817-838) al-Aghlab Abu Affan ibn Ibrahim (838-841) Muhammad I Abul-Abbas ibn al-Aghlab Abi Affan ...

Including:

Read more here: » Aghlabid: Encyclopedia - Aghlabid

863: Encyclopedia - Al-Musta'in

Al-Musta'in (Arabic: المستعين) (d. 866) was the Abbasid Caliph in Baghdad from 862 to 866. After the death of previous Caliph, al-Muntasir, the Turkish chiefs held a council to select his successor; they would have none of al-Mu'tazz, nor his brothers; so they elected him, another grandson of al-Mu'tasim. The Arabs and western troops from Baghdad, displeased at the choice, attacked the assembly, broke open the prison, and plundered the armory. They were attacked by the Turkish and Berber soldiers, and after a round figh ...

Read more here: » Al-Musta'in: Encyclopedia - Al-Musta'in

863: Encyclopedia - Boris I of Bulgaria

Boris I Michail or Boris I Michael (Bulgarian Борис I Михаил)(died May 2, 907) was the khan from 852 to 889 and first Christian ruler of Bulgaria. Michael became part of his name after his baptism in 864. He was son of Khan Presijan of Bulgaria. Boris kept the borders of his country essentially unchanged with diplomacy and alliances with the Frankish king Charles the Bald, Prince Rostislav of Moravia, the Byzantine Emperor Michael III, and eventually King Louis the German even though suffering defeats. ...

Including:

Read more here: » Boris I of Bulgaria: Encyclopedia - Boris I of Bulgaria

863: Encyclopedia II - Saint Cyril - Early life

Cyril and Methodius were born in Thessaloniki, now part of Greece, to a Greek drungarios (a military officer) named Leon and a Slavic mother. Cyril was reputedly the youngest of seven brothers, according to the Vita Cyrilli ("The Life of Cyril"). He is said to have given himself to the pursuit of heavenly wisdom at the age of seven, but at fourteen was made an orphan by the death of his parents. An influential official, possibly the eunuch Theoctistes, brought him to Constantinople where he studied theology and philosoph ...

See also:

Saint Cyril, Saint Cyril - Early life, Saint Cyril - Mission to the Slavs, Saint Cyril - Journey to Rome

Read more here: » Saint Cyril: Encyclopedia II - Saint Cyril - Early life

863: Encyclopedia II - List of North American area codes - 200

201: New Jersey (Jersey City, Hoboken, Bayonne, Hackensack, and northeast New Jersey, overlays with 551) 202: District of Columbia (all) 203: Connecticut (Bridgeport, New Haven, Waterbury and southwestern Connecticut, overlays with 475) 204: Manitoba (all) 205: Alabama (Originally the code for the entire state, it still covers the largest city, Birmingha ...

See also:

List of North American area codes, List of North American area codes - 200, List of North American area codes - 300, List of North American area codes - 400, List of North American area codes - 500, List of North American area codes - 600, List of North American area codes - 700, List of North American area codes - 800, List of North American area codes - 900

Read more here: » List of North American area codes: Encyclopedia II - List of North American area codes - 200

863: Encyclopedia II - List of rulers of Bosnia - Bosnian kingdom

1353 (1357?) - 1391 (Ban 1353-1377, King 1377-1391) Tvrtko I of Kotroman (born 1338?, died 1391) Nephew of Stephen Kotromanić. Crowned himself 'King of Serbs and Bosnia' in 1377. 1391 - 1395 Stephen (Stjepan) Dabiša (died 1395) Illegitimate son of Ninoslav Kotromanić, a son of Kotroman. 1395 - 1398 Jelena Gruba, widow of Stephen Dabisa 1398 - 1404, 1409 - 1418 King Ostoja Kotromanić (died 1418) Son of Tvrtko Kotromanić. Power struggles with ...

See also:

List of rulers of Bosnia, List of rulers of Bosnia - Early history, List of rulers of Bosnia - Emergence of native Bosnian bans, List of rulers of Bosnia - Bosnian kingdom, List of rulers of Bosnia - Turkish occupation, List of rulers of Bosnia - Austrian occupation, List of rulers of Bosnia - Modern times, List of rulers of Bosnia - Related articles, List of rulers of Bosnia - External link

Read more here: » List of rulers of Bosnia: Encyclopedia II - List of rulers of Bosnia - Bosnian kingdom

863: Encyclopedia II - Old Church Slavonic - Basis and local influences

Old Church Slavonic is evidenced by a relatively small body of manuscripts, written for the most part, in the late 10th and the early 11th century. The language has a Southern Slavic basis with an admixture of Western Slavic features inherited during the mission of Saint Cyril and Saint Methodius to Great Moravia (863 - 885). The only well-preserved manuscript of Moravian recension, the Kiev Folia, is characterised by the replacement of some Southern Slavonic phonetical and lexical features with Western Slavic ones. Manuscripts written in the medieval Bulgari ...

See also:

Old Church Slavonic, Old Church Slavonic - History, Old Church Slavonic - Script, Old Church Slavonic - Basis and local influences, Old Church Slavonic - Later recensions Church Slavonic, Old Church Slavonic - Authors, Old Church Slavonic - Nomenclature, Old Church Slavonic - Modern Slavic nomenclature

Read more here: » Old Church Slavonic: Encyclopedia II - Old Church Slavonic - Basis and local influences

863: Encyclopedia II - Xanten - History

Xanten - Antique. First settlements by isolated tribes can be dated around the year 2000 BC. Around 15 BC the Roman camp Castra Vetera was created on the Fürstenberg near today's locality Birten. It was intended to be a base for campaigns into Germania and until its destruction during the uprising of the Batavians in 70 AD it was occupied by 8,000 to 10,000 legionaries, and was the main bas ...

See also:

Xanten, Xanten - Geography, Xanten - History, Xanten - Antique, Xanten - The Middle Ages, Xanten - Modern times, Xanten - Bibliography

Read more here: » Xanten: Encyclopedia II - Xanten - History

863: Encyclopedia II - Pope Joan - The Legend

The story of Pope Joan is known mainly from the 13th century Polish chronicler Martin of Opava (Martin von Trappau to Germans, also known as Martin Polonus, "Martin the Pole"). In his Chronicon Pontificum et Imperatum, Martin writes: After... Leo, John Anglicus, born at Mainz, was pope for two years, seven months and four days, and died in Rome, after which there was a vacancy in the papacy of one month. It is claimed that this John was a woman, who as a girl had been led to Athens dressed in the clothes ...

See also:

Pope Joan, Pope Joan - The Legend, Pope Joan - Analysis, Pope Joan - Related Issues, Pope Joan - Art and film, Pope Joan - Books

Read more here: » Pope Joan: Encyclopedia II - Pope Joan - The Legend

863: 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

863: Encyclopedia II - Linguistic history of Spanish - Abandonment of phonological length

At a very early time in the development of Romance, the distinction between Latin long vowels and short vowels was very slight and the number of minimal pairs based on vowel length is much smaller than in Latin. This loss of distinction in vowel length would have made the nominative case and the ablative case of the first declension identical in sound (but still distinct in writing). ...

See also:

Linguistic history of Spanish, Linguistic history of Spanish - Basque influence, Linguistic history of Spanish - Celtic influence, Linguistic history of Spanish - Germanic influence, Linguistic history of Spanish - Arabic influence, Linguistic history of Spanish - Addition of the definite article, Linguistic history of Spanish - Abandonment of phonological length, Linguistic history of Spanish - Loss of case system, Linguistic history of Spanish - Loss of deponent verbs, Linguistic history of Spanish - Latin 'f-' to Spanish 'h-', Linguistic history of Spanish - Voicing, Linguistic history of Spanish - Elision, Linguistic history of Spanish - Syncope, Linguistic history of Spanish - Diphthongization, Linguistic history of Spanish - Monophthongization, Linguistic history of Spanish - Learned words and consonant cluster simplification, Linguistic history of Spanish - Words of non-Latin origin, Linguistic history of Spanish - Lists of Spanish etymology

Read more here: » Linguistic history of Spanish: Encyclopedia II - Linguistic history of Spanish - Abandonment of phonological length

863: Encyclopedia II - Byzantine Literature - Influences

If Byzantine literature is the expression of the intellectual life of the Hellenized populace of the Eastern Roman Empire during the Christian Middle Ages, then it is a multiform organism, combining Greek and Christian civilization on the common foundation of the Roman political system, set in the intellectual and ethnographic atmosphere of the Near East. Byzantine literature partakes of four different cultural elements: the Greek, the Christian, the Roman, and the Oriental, the character of which commingling with the rest. To Hellenistic in ...

See also:

Byzantine Literature, Byzantine Literature - Influences, Byzantine Literature - Greek, Byzantine Literature - Roman, Byzantine Literature - Christian, Byzantine Literature - Oriental, Byzantine Literature - The Byzantine mosaic, Byzantine Literature - Genres, Byzantine Literature - Historians and annalists, Byzantine Literature - Encyclopedists and essayists, Byzantine Literature - Secular poetry, Byzantine Literature - Ecclesiastical and theological literature, Byzantine Literature - Popular poetry

Read more here: » Byzantine Literature: Encyclopedia II - Byzantine Literature - Influences

863: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c 4 BC – 33 AD

The Roman Catholic Church was founded on the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, also known as Jesus Christ. Jesus, himself, was a carpenter from the region of Galilee and practiced as a member of the Jewish faith. Roman Catholicism, therefore, considers itself to be a successor religion to Judaism with the Christian God and the God of the Jews seen as one and the same. The development of the religion which would eventually become Christianity began for Jesus at a young age. Church tradition holds that, sometime in his early teens, Jesus ...

See also:

History of the Roman Catholic Church, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c 4 BC – 33 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Middle Ages 800 AD – 1499 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Renaissance 1500 AD – 1629 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Age of Reason 1630 AD – 1799 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 19th Century Catholic Church 1800 AD – 1899 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 20th Century Catholic Church 1901 AD – 2000 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates

Read more here: » History of the Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c 4 BC – 33 AD

863: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: The ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c. 4 BC – AD 33

The Roman Catholic Church was founded on the person and teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, known as Jesus Christ, "Christ" meaning the same as "Messiah". Jesus was a carpenter from the region of Galilee and observed the Jewish faith. Roman Catholicism thus considers itself a successor religion to Judaism with the Christian God and the God of the Jews seen as one and the same. Some suppose that Jesus, when twelve years old, experienced a revelation in Herod's Temple in Jerusalem, realizing that he was the Son of God. This is an interpreta ...

See also:

History of the Roman Catholic Church, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: The ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c. 4 BC – AD 33, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Middle Ages 800 AD – 1499 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Renaissance 1500 AD – 1629 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Age of Reason 1630 AD – 1799 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 19th Century Catholic Church 1800 AD – 1899 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 20th Century Catholic Church 1901 AD – 2000 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates

Read more here: » History of the Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: The ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c. 4 BC – AD 33

863: Encyclopedia II - Hincmar - Archbishop of Reims

In 845 he obtained through the king's support the archbishopric of Reims, and this choice was confirmed at the synod of Beauvais (April 845). Archbishop Ebbo, whom he replaced. had been deposed in 835 at the synod of Thionville (Diedenhofen) for having broken his oath of fidelityto the emperor Louis, whom he had deserted to join the party of Lothair. After the death of Louis, Ebbo succeeded in regaining possession of his see for some years (840-844), but in 844 Pope Sergius II confirmed his deposition. It was in these circumstances that Hincmar succeede ...

See also:

Hincmar, Hincmar - Early life, Hincmar - Archbishop of Reims, Hincmar - Works

Read more here: » Hincmar: Encyclopedia II - Hincmar - Archbishop of Reims

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