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tenth century

A Wisdom Archive on tenth century

tenth century

A selection of articles related to tenth century

We recommend this article: tenth century - 1, and also this: tenth century - 2.
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Religious pluralism, Religious pluralism - Antiquity, Religious pluralism - Bahá'í views, Religious pluralism - Buddhist views, Religious pluralism - Christian views, Religious pluralism - Classical Greek and Roman pagan religious views, Religious pluralism - Conditions for the existence of religious pluralism, Religious pluralism - Enlightenment, Religious pluralism - Hindu views, Religious pluralism - History of religious pluralism, Religious pluralism - Inter-religious pluralism between different religions, Religious pluralism - Intra-religious pluralism between different denominations within the same religion, Religious pluralism - Jewish views, Religious pluralism - Medieval times in Europe, Religious pluralism - Muslim views, Religious pluralism - Pluralism as interfaith dialogue, Religious pluralism - Pluralism as the belief that more than one religion can teach truths, Religious pluralism - The Protestant Reformation, Anti-cult movement, Progressive Christianity, Projects working for peace among Israelis and Arabs, Jacques Dupuis, Bat Ye'or, Freedom of religion, Inter-religious Organisations, Pluralism, Différance, Syncretism, Noahide System, Unitarian Universalism, Christianity and World Religions, Comparative Religion

ARTICLES RELATED TO tenth century

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Anglo-Saxon architecture

Anglo-Saxon architecture was a period in the history of architecture in England, and parts of Wales, from the mid-5th century until the Norman Conquest of 1066. There are few remains of Anglo-Saxon architecture, with no secular work remaining above ground. At least fifty churches are of Anglo-Saxon origin, with many more claiming to be, although in some cases the Anglo-Saxon part is small and much-altered. Distinctive features of Anglo-Saxon architecture include rough brickwork, extremely thick walls and mostly arch wind ...

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Read more here: » Anglo-Saxon architecture: Encyclopedia - Anglo-Saxon architecture

tenth century: Encyclopedia II - History of Anglo-Saxon England - Formation of England: Tenth Century
Alfred of Wessex died in 899 and was succeeded by his son Edward the Elder. Edward, and his brother in law Æthelred of (what was left of) Mercia, began a program of expansion, building forts and towns on an Alfredian model. On Æthelred's death his wife (Edward's sister) Æthelflæd ruled as 'Lady of the Mercians', and continued expansion. It seems Edward had his son Athelstan brought up in the Mercian court, and on Edward's ...

See also:

History of Anglo-Saxon England, History of Anglo-Saxon England - Sources, History of Anglo-Saxon England - Migration: Fifth to Sixth Centuries, History of Anglo-Saxon England - Seventh to Eighth Centuries, History of Anglo-Saxon England - First Viking Age: Ninth Century, History of Anglo-Saxon England - Formation of England: Tenth Century, History of Anglo-Saxon England - The Second Viking Age and the Norman Conquest: Eleventh Century

Read more here: » History of Anglo-Saxon England: Encyclopedia II - History of Anglo-Saxon England - Formation of England: Tenth Century

tenth century: Encyclopedia II - History of Devon - Celtic origins Romans and the arrival of the Saxons

The name "Devon" derives from name given by the Romans to the Celtic people who inhabited the south western peninsula of Britain at the time of the Roman invasion c AD50, the Dumnonii - meaning 'Deep Valley Dwellers'. The Romans held the area under Military Occupation for approx 25 years, and maintained a garrison at Exeter, which they named 'Isca Dumnoniorum. There was a Roman Civitas here for the following three centuries at least. The Germanic peoples who settled England from the fifth century on did not conquer Devon until relatively lat ...

See also:

History of Devon, History of Devon - Prehistory, History of Devon - Celtic origins Romans and the arrival of the Saxons, History of Devon - Celtic Placenames, History of Devon - Celtic Customs, History of Devon - Ninth and Tenth Century, History of Devon - Civil Conflicts, History of Devon - Mining, History of Devon - Maritime history

Read more here: » History of Devon: Encyclopedia II - History of Devon - Celtic origins Romans and the arrival of the Saxons

tenth century: Encyclopedia - History of Anglo-Saxon England

The History of Anglo-Saxon England covers the history of early medieval England from the end of Roman Britain and the establishment of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in the 5th century until the Conquest by the Normans in 1066. The 5th and 6th centuries are known archaeologically as Sub-Roman Britain, or in popular history as the "Dark Ages"; from the 6th century larger distinctive kingdoms are developing, still known to some as the Heptarchy; the arrival of the Vikings at the end of the 8th century brought many changes to Britain, and relation ...

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Read more here: » History of Anglo-Saxon England: Encyclopedia - History of Anglo-Saxon England

tenth century: Service As Worship

Dharma depends upon time, circumstances, age, degree of evolution and the community to which one belongs. The Dharma of this century is different from that of the tenth century.

 

Excerpt from All About Hinduism by Sri Swami Sivananda

 

Read more here: » Hindu Ethics: Service As Worship

tenth century: The Changing Dharma

Dharma depends upon time, circumstances, age, degree of evolution and the community to which one belongs. The Dharma of this century is different from that of the tenth century.

 

Excerpt from All About Hinduism by Sri Swami Sivananda

 

Read more here: » Dharma: The Changing Dharma

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Buile Shuibhne

The Buile Shuibhne is the tale of Sweeney, a legendary king of Ulster in Ireland. The story is told in mixture of poetry and prose and exists in manuscripts dating from 1671 - 1674 but which was almost surely written and circulated in its modern form sometime in the thirteenth to fifteenth centuries. It is likely, from references in works going back to the tenth century, that some form of the ta ...

Read more here: » Buile Shuibhne: Encyclopedia - Buile Shuibhne

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Anusim

Anusim (Hebrew, forced ones) is a term describing persons unwillingly converted from Judaism to another religion. Instances of forced conversion occur throughout Christian history which include the baptism of the Jewish community of Clermont-Ferrand, France in 570 AD, the compulsory conversions throughout the Rhineland in the tenth century, and the Conversos or Marranos (New Christians) of Spain and Portugal. When such events occurred, the Jewish converts tried retaining their heritage by attempting in secret to teach the child

Read more here: » Anusim: Encyclopedia - Anusim

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Alba

Alba is the ancient and modern Gaelic name (IPA: /ˈaɫapə/) for the country of Scotland (also Alba in Irish, and in Old Gaelic Albu). The word ultimately comes from a Celtic word referring to the whole island of Great Britain, hence the early classical Albion. It was used by the Gaels to refer to the island as a whole until roughly the ninth or tenth centuries, when it came to be the name given to the kingdoms of the Picts and the Scots (Pictavia and Dalriada ...

Read more here: » Alba: Encyclopedia - Alba

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Abd ar-Rahman I

Abd ar-Rahman I (ruled 756-788) was the founder of a Muslim dynasty that ruled Spain for nearly three centuries. He was a grandson of Hisham ibn Abd al-Malik, the tenth Umayyad Caliph. When the Umayyads were overthrown in the East by the Abbasids he was a young man of about twenty years of age. Together with his brother Yahya, he took refuge with Bedouin tribes in the desert. The Abbasids hunted their enemies down without mercy. Their soldiers overtook the brothers; Yahya was slain, and Abd-ar-Rahman saved ...

Read more here: » Abd ar-Rahman I: Encyclopedia - Abd ar-Rahman I

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Bar Daisan

Bar Daisan (154-222), also latinized as Bardesanes, was a Syriac gnostic and an outstanding scientist, scholar, and poet. He was also renowned for his knowledge of India, on which he wrote a book, now lost. He was born in Edessa, and died in Ani. One of the chapters of Mani's lost Book of Secrets concerned Bar Daisan, according to the list of it contents given by the tenth-century Islamic writer Ibn al-Nadim in his encyclopedia [1]. Bar Da ...

Including:

Read more here: » Bar Daisan: Encyclopedia - Bar Daisan

tenth century: Encyclopedia - James Oppenheim

James Oppenheim (1882-1932), US poet, author and editor Prolific poet, lay analyst, and an early follower of C. G. Jung, and the founder and editor of The Seven Arts, an important early Twentieth Century US literary magazine. Oppenheim depicted labor troubles with fabian and suffragist themes in his novel The Nine-Tenths (1911), and developed these themes in his famous poem "Bread and Roses" published in December of 1911 - and set to music in 1976 by Mimi Fariña. The poem provided a winning slogan a month later f ...

Read more here: » James Oppenheim: Encyclopedia - James Oppenheim

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Ani Armenia

Ani, known to Romans as Abnicum, is a ruined capital of medieval Armenia, situated in Turkey, province of Kars, immediately south from the Turko-Armenian frontier, at an altitude of 4390 ft., between the border river Harpasus (Arpa-Çay in Turkish, Akhurian in Armenian) and a deep ravine. In the tenth century the town of Ani was expanded into a major city by Ashot III, who made it the capital of Armenia under the Bagratid dynasty (961). When it was handed over to the Byzantines in 1045, it was a populous city, known trad ...

Read more here: » Ani Armenia: Encyclopedia - Ani Armenia

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Asirgarh

Asirgarh is an Indian fortress situated in the Satpura Range, about 20 km. north of the town of Burhanpur, in Burhanpur District of Madhya Pradesh state. The fortress commands a pass through the Satpuras connecting the valleys of the Narmada and Tapti rivers, one of the most important routes from northern India to the Deccan in the southwest. It is known as the "key to the Deccan". The fortress is home to a tenth-century temple of Shiva. From 1388 it was a stronghold of the Faruqi rulers of Kandesh who surrendered to the Mughal

Read more here: » Asirgarh: Encyclopedia - Asirgarh

tenth century: Encyclopedia - World Agudath Israel

World Agudath Israel (The World Israelite Union) was established in the early twentieth century as the political arm of Orthodox Judaism. Its base was in Eastern Europe where traditional Judaism was strong before the Second World War and was undergoing a revivial due to the Hasidic movement. Its origins lie in a conference held at Kattowitz (Katowice) in 1912 after the Tenth World Zionist Congress had defeated a motion by religious Zionists for funding for religious schools. This defeat resulted in a number of religious Zionists (or < ...

Read more here: » World Agudath Israel: Encyclopedia - World Agudath Israel

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Codex Regius

The Codex Regius is an Icelandic manuscript (See also Codex) which is thought to have been written in the 1270s, but many of the poems and stories contained in it pre-date the conversion of Scandinavia to Christianity in the late tenth century. It was found by the bishop of Skálholt, Brynjólfur Sveinsson in 1643 and was presented to King Frederick III of Denmark. Snorri Sturluson's Younger Edda (also known as the Prose Edda) makes numerous references to verses contained in it, and most of the poetry in the Elder Edda (also kno ...

Read more here: » Codex Regius: Encyclopedia - Codex Regius

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Codex Aureus of Lorsch

Codex Aureus of Lorsch (also known as the Lorsch Gospels) was written between 778-820 during the period of Charlemagne. It was located for the first time in Lorsch Abbey (Germany), where it was mentioned as Evangelium scriptum cum auro pictum habens tabulas eburneas in the catalogue of the Lorsch Abbey library, compiled in 830 under Abbot Adelung. Considering gold letters in the manuscript and its location at Lorsch it was named the Codex Aureus Laurensius. In the tenth and eleventh centuries, the libr ...

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Read more here: » Codex Aureus of Lorsch: Encyclopedia - Codex Aureus of Lorsch

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Bhoj

Bhoj was a great philosopher king and polymath of medieval India. He ruled the kingdom of Malwa in central India from about 1010 to 1060. He was from the Paramara dynasty of Rajputs, who ruled Malwa from the mid-tenth century to about 1200. His extensive writings cover philosophy, poetry, medicine, veterinary science, phonetics, yoga, and archery. Under his rule, Malwa and its capital Dhar became one of the chief intellectual centers of India. King Bhoj, together with the Solanki king Bhima of Gujarat (Anhilwara), rebuilt the temple a ...

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Read more here: » Bhoj: Encyclopedia - Bhoj

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Coronzon

According to Meric Casaubon’s ‘True and Faithful Relation…’ this is the spirit entity that can be found residing within the tenth Enochian Aethyr ZAX, reached by using one of the 48 Enochian calls. The Enochian system of ceremonial magic was the result of the crystal scrying exercises carried out by the 16th century Elizabethan astrologer and Magus John Dee while working with seer Edward Kelly. Although Casaubon’s book records the name as Coronzon the more famous spelling of the name is Choronzon, noting ...

Read more here: » Coronzon: Encyclopedia - Coronzon

tenth century: Encyclopedia - Zadok High Priest

Zadok (Hebrew: Tzadok meaning "Righteous") was the Israelite High Priest of the tenth century BCE. Zadok High Priest - Zadok in the Bible. A son of Ahitub, of the line of Eleazer (2 Samuel 8:17; 1 Chronicles 24:3), high priest in the time of David (2 Sam. 20:25) and Solomon (1 Kings 4:4). He is first mentioned as coming to take part with David at Hebron (1 Chr. 12:27, 28). He was probably on this account made ruler over the Aaronites (27:17). During the rebellion of Absalom, Zadok gained still ...

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Read more here: » Zadok High Priest: Encyclopedia - Zadok High Priest

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