例文 | 共起表現 |
「chroniclers」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 62件
rson, Alan Orr Scottish Annals from English | Chroniclers: AD 500-1286, (London, 1908), republished, |
son, Alan Orr, Scottish Annals from English | Chroniclers: AD 500-1286, (London, 1908), republished, |
name of the Obodrites used by the medieval | chroniclers Adam of Bremen and Helmold of Bosau, is pro |
re the Fool", was given to him by the Greek | chroniclers after his repeated failed usurpations. |
Chroniclers also give accounts of the political connota | |
an exonym for Romanian) descent by medieval | chroniclers and modern historians. |
Besides the | chroniclers, Archbishop Anselm of Canterbury wrote to P |
There is a discrepancy among the | chroniclers as to the date of the execution. |
wn time, Albert becomes, like most medieval | chroniclers, both fuller and more reliable. |
Later Iberian Christian | chroniclers call her Al Mutamid's daughter, but the Isl |
A woman the | chroniclers call the Lady of Cofitachequi was carried f |
The Council points out that, if the | chroniclers can denounce with strength the ideas and th |
Nonetheless, later | chroniclers criticised him as given over to excessive l |
Many | chroniclers decried his financial ruthlessness and his |
by James Raine in The Priory of Hexham, its | Chroniclers, Endowments and Annals (Durham, 1864 to 186 |
was engaged in 1820 to edit the Carolingian | chroniclers for the newly-founded Historical Society of |
Contemporary | chroniclers give accounts of events in Toulouse of this |
Besides them, the | Chroniclers had mentioned several other titles: Qutub-e |
do Malaterra, he died in 1054, though other | chroniclers have him dying in 1057 or as late as 1060, |
founder of Balanjar, according to the Arab | chroniclers Ibn al-Faqih and Abu al-Fida, was named Bal |
The place was first noticed by | chroniclers in 1071 as Ust-Sheksna, i.e. "the mouth of |
It was first mentioned by Kievan | chroniclers in connection with the Battle of the Stugna |
enous words that were recorded by de Soto's | chroniclers in present-day Georgia, North Carolina and |
supporting this idea, we have from English | chroniclers in the 17th century, who state that their p |
t in the sixteenth century, repeated by the | chroniclers John Rastell and Edward Hall, by a continue |
Later | chroniclers made the kings into eight, all plying the o |
One of England's greatest | chroniclers, Matthew Paris, is believed to have been bo |
ere known across Latin Europe as only a few | chroniclers mention the treaty at all; Fulcher of Chart |
The tennis balls are also disputed; some | chroniclers mention them, but other historians conclude |
The expedition's | chroniclers noted that the river at this point was too |
As a minor, Moorish | chroniclers noted his authority "was limited to choosin |
especially noted as one of the major early | chroniclers of Franco-Ontarian history. |
He was one of the leading | chroniclers of the Silicon Valley dot-com boom and its |
st Crusade, he is one of the most important | chroniclers of the crusade. |
the Rolls Series by Richard Howlett in the | Chroniclers of the Reigns of Stephen, Henry II and Rich |
Chroniclers of History like De Barros, Barbosa, Hamilto | |
This includes | chroniclers, of course, but also the authors of such wo |
oes on to write, "Nevertheless, to this day | chroniclers of the musical theater invariably state Bri |
the Annual Award from the Mexican Union of | Chroniclers of Theater and Music, given for its 25th an |
The accounts of the Byzantine | chroniclers on the subsequent events however differ gre |
rraine, a traveller and one of the very few | chroniclers or historians of the Vosges whose works hav |
The contemporary court | chroniclers paid an unusual amount of attention to this |
Mul was Caedwalla's younger brother and the | chroniclers record that when Caedwalla, king of the Sou |
Contemporary | chroniclers record that Cranmer conducted Edward's fune |
probably the best informed of all medieval | chroniclers, since he was contemporary with described e |
the Jewish Encyclopedia states that "Arabic | chroniclers strangely relate that he believed neither i |
Orthodox Christian and Islamic | chroniclers tell stories of barbarian savagery and brut |
from the coins and the evidence of Chinese | chroniclers that at this time Sapadbizes was an ally or |
dhood, in contrast to the ideas of medieval | chroniclers that the prince had first been baptized as |
According to the | chroniclers, the populace lynched his envoy Antoninos, |
re free to read the records of the imperial | chroniclers, the imperial chroniclers would feel constr |
According to the | Chroniclers, the sons of Asaph, Zaccur, Joseph, Nethani |
f Montecassino is one of three Italo-Norman | chroniclers, the others being William of Apulia and Gof |
ed because of the hostility of the monastic | chroniclers to both himself and to Rufus. |
e was said by Giraldus Cambrensis and other | chroniclers to have been surrounded by a hedge, which n |
The 12th century English historians and | chroniclers Walter Map and William of Newburgh recorded |
ng to the general consensus of the Armenian | chroniclers, was a commander in the king's armies. |
at this belief started when early Christian | chroniclers were confused by the similarity between 'Ro |
what we know of his see is gleaned from the | chroniclers William Thorne and William Dene Mepehem was |
Later historians and | chroniclers would praise Douglas and his guerrillas as |
Different | chroniclers writing in the Gesta Normannorum Ducum call |
g Robert's reign and accepts that the early | chroniclers writing near to his reign found little to c |
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