• Thumbnail for French New Wave
    The New Wave (French: Nouvelle Vague, French pronunciation: [nuvɛl væɡ]), also called the French New Wave, is a French art film movement that emerged...
    26 KB (2,988 words) - 08:16, 15 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Nouveau roman
    Le cinéma français depuis la nouvelle vague, Fernand Nathan/Alliance Française, 1972 Baldick, Chris (2015). "Nouveau roman, le". The Oxford Dictionary...
    9 KB (899 words) - 09:25, 6 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Indo-Roman trade relations
    Indo-Roman trade relations (see also the spice trade and incense road) was trade between the Indian subcontinent and the Roman Empire in Europe and the...
    43 KB (4,445 words) - 15:02, 29 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Holy Roman Empire
    The Holy Roman Empire, also known as the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation after 1512, was a polity in Central and Western Europe, usually headed...
    181 KB (20,898 words) - 01:54, 25 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Roman calendar
    The Roman calendar was the calendar used by the Roman Kingdom and Roman Republic. Although the term is primarily used for Rome's pre-Julian calendars...
    76 KB (7,346 words) - 08:59, 18 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Historiography of the fall of the Western Roman Empire
    Roman Empire are a historical theme that was introduced by historian Edward Gibbon in his 1776 book The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire...
    65 KB (9,108 words) - 15:41, 19 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Sino-Roman relations
    Beginning in the 1st century BC with Virgil, Horace, and Strabo, Roman historians offer only vague accounts of China and the silk-producing Seres people of the...
    116 KB (14,305 words) - 20:25, 22 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Notre-Dame de la Garde
    Notre-Dame de la Garde (French pronunciation: [nɔtʁ(ə) dam d(ə) la ɡaʁd]; lit.: Our Lady of the Guard), known to local citizens as la Bonne Mère (French...
    67 KB (9,224 words) - 11:04, 7 October 2024
  • Roman Inquisition, formally Suprema Congregatio Sanctae Romanae et Universalis Inquisitionis (Latin for 'the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Roman...
    22 KB (2,842 words) - 06:57, 18 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Jean de La Fontaine
    ground for the vague scandal as to her conduct, which was, for the most part, raised long afterwards by gossip or personal enemies of La Fontaine. All...
    37 KB (4,694 words) - 12:59, 1 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mars (mythology)
    In ancient Roman religion and mythology, Mars (Latin: Mārs, pronounced [maːrs]) is the god of war and also an agricultural guardian, a combination characteristic...
    82 KB (10,574 words) - 14:35, 12 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Sexuality in ancient Rome
    regarded sex throughout the Greco-Roman world as governed by restraint and the art of managing sexual pleasure. Roman society was patriarchal (see paterfamilias)...
    265 KB (34,869 words) - 11:43, 12 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Count
    Count (redirect from Roman Count)
    sense of the seat of power and administration. This other kind of count had vague antecedents in Late Antiquity too: the father of Cassiodorus held positions...
    34 KB (3,300 words) - 19:50, 3 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for La Paz
    the former Inca lands had been entrusted to Pedro de la Gasca by the Spanish king (and Holy Roman Emperor) Emperor Charles V. Gasca commanded Alonso de...
    75 KB (6,470 words) - 17:16, 27 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for List of Roman moneyers during the Republic
    apart from a very vague statement from Pomponius. It was thought by Niebuhr that they were introduced at the time when the Romans first began to coin...
    80 KB (993 words) - 11:15, 11 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Constitution of the Roman Republic
    the Roman Republic was a set of uncodified norms and customs which, together with various written laws, guided the procedural governance of the Roman Republic...
    58 KB (7,964 words) - 23:01, 8 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Baalbek
    Baalbek (/ˈbɑːlbɛk, ˈbeɪəlbɛk/; Arabic: بَعْلَبَكّ, romanized: Baʿlabakk; Syriac-Aramaic: ܒܥܠܒܟ) is a city located east of the Litani River in Lebanon's...
    118 KB (11,424 words) - 17:05, 12 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Xylospongium
    Academics disagree as to its exact use, about which the primary sources are vague. It has traditionally been assumed to be a type of shared anal hygiene utensil...
    5 KB (502 words) - 21:48, 23 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Church of the Madonna della Difesa
    (Italian: Chiesa della Madonna della Difesa, French: Église de Notre-Dame-de-la-Défense) is a Catholic church in the neighbourhood of Little Italy in Montreal...
    5 KB (276 words) - 20:21, 21 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Prophecy of the Popes
    as forgery. The prophecy concludes with a pope identified as "Peter the Roman", whose pontificate will allegedly precede the destruction of the city of...
    88 KB (3,200 words) - 06:08, 4 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Thrace
    Thrace (/θreɪs/, thrayss; Bulgarian: Тракия, romanized: Trakiya; Greek: Θράκη, romanized: Thráki; Turkish: Trakya) is a geographical and historical region...
    24 KB (2,822 words) - 04:31, 6 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for David LaChapelle
    David LaChapelle (born March 11, 1963) is an American photographer, music video director, and film director. He is best known for his work in fashion and...
    54 KB (4,583 words) - 21:05, 24 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Imperial Roman army
    accounts of battles particularly helpful due to vagueness. When there were open field battles, the Roman usually made use of a multiple line system in order...
    215 KB (28,741 words) - 03:50, 6 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Mona Lisa
    Mona Lisa (redirect from La Gionconda)
    mysteriously" and that "Beneath the form expressed one feels a thought that is vague, infinite, inexpressible. One is moved, troubled ... repressed desires,...
    101 KB (10,134 words) - 05:58, 10 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Spain
    other pre-Roman peoples. With the Roman conquest of the Iberian Peninsula, the province of Hispania was established. Following the Romanization and Christianization...
    245 KB (23,207 words) - 23:56, 7 October 2024
  • Nausea (novel) (redirect from La Nausée)
    interpréter le sentiment de la nausée de mille façons différentes dont aucune ne me semble convaincante. Un lecteur attentif du roman de Sartre devrait être...
    47 KB (6,119 words) - 08:23, 30 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for A Coruña
    A Coruña (redirect from La Coruna)
    A Coruña (Galician pronunciation: [ɐ koˈɾuɲɐ] ; Spanish: La Coruña [la koˈɾuɲa] ; also informally called just Coruña; historical English: Corunna or The...
    66 KB (7,059 words) - 15:40, 7 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Cleopatra
    footnote 103). Plutarch, translated by Jones (2006, p. 187), wrote in vague terms that "Octavian had Caesarion killed later, after Cleopatra's death...
    218 KB (24,658 words) - 22:17, 11 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Roman Catholic Diocese of Lausanne, Geneva and Fribourg
    Cantons of Bern, Geneva, Vaud and Neuchâtel, owing to serious differences[vague] with the Radical regime at Fribourg, Marilley was kept a prisoner for fifty...
    46 KB (5,632 words) - 14:49, 12 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Córdoba, Spain
    Córdoba, Spain (category All articles with vague or ambiguous time)
    Maria, Córdoba Roman bridge of Córdoba Riverfront viewed from Puente Romano, Córdoba Roman temple of Córdoba Church of San Nicolás de la Villa Statue of...
    114 KB (10,057 words) - 12:32, 10 October 2024