- Alexios I
Komnenos (Gr****: Ἀλέξιος Κομνηνός, translit. Aléxios Komnēnós, c. 1057 – 15
August 1118),
Latinized as
Alexius I Comnenus, was
Byzantine emperor...
-
Valentinian III (Latin:
Placidus Valentini****; 2 July 419 – 16
March 455) was
Roman emperor in the West from 425 to 455.
Starting in childhood, his reign...
- Nicolaus, of Toruń). At Bologna, in 1496, he
registered in the
Matricula Nobilissimi Germanorum Collegii, resp.
Annales Clarissimae Nacionis Germanorum, of...
- century,
which was
included in the
biography as a preface,
Descriptio Nobilissimi Civitatis Londoniae. The
three editions of this work
demonstrate a continuing...
-
mentioning Urban is
quoted in Shaw, 221 note 38: Quod ille
consilio nobilissimi viri Urbani,
Africanae Regionis sub
dogmate Catholicae fidei exorti [or...
-
Bagrat IV (Georgian: ბაგრატ IV; 1018 – 24
November 1072), of the
Bagrationi dynasty, was the king (mepe) of the
Kingdom of
Georgia from 1027 to 1072. During...
-
Tzachas (Gr****: Τζαχᾶς, romanized: Tzachás), also
known as
Chaka Bey (Turkish: Çaka Bey), was an 11th-century
Seljuk Turkish military commander who ruled...
-
Marcus Aurelius Valerius Romulus (died 309 AD), was the son of
Emperor Maxentius and of
Valeria Maximilla,
daughter of
Emperor Galerius by his
first wife...
-
regnal list at the end of Chronicle). '[...] **** jam de
filia Torethi nobilissimi comitis filium susce****et Edmundum.'--Ailred of Rievaulx, Genealogia...
-
football in
England was
given by
William Fitzstephen in his
Descriptio Nobilissimi Civitatis Londoniae (c. 1174 – 1183). He
described the
activities of...