| Vladimir Tismaneanu - Business & Economics - 1995 - 426 pages
...Kyrgyz were dependent on ancient Chinese states and later, in the first century BC, on the Huns. lt was at the end of the fifth and the beginning of the sixth centuries AD that the Kyrgyz gained independence and built a state of their own. That state, though... | |
| Dan Urman, Paul Virgil McCracken Flesher - Religion - 1998 - 788 pages
...crops in the fertile surroundings, as well as on olive-oil production. The village reached its zenith at the end of the fifth and the beginning of the sixth centuries CE, when a large synagogue was built on the crest of the ridge... During the course of the... | |
| Nancy Elizabeth Van Deusen - History - 1999 - 240 pages
...Cato's Distichs, which continue to be used, but much less prominently, until the later Middle Ages? At the end of the fifth and the beginning of the sixth century the barbarian aristocracy throughout western Europe rejected the Roman educational system and... | |
| Joseph Patrich - History - 2001 - 496 pages
...in which Orthodoxy [ie, Chalcedon] was accepted."46 The rise of Chalcedonian orthodoxy in Palestine at the end of the fifth and the beginning of the sixth century was connected with the formation of the monastic circle of the Judaean desert. While immediately... | |
| Janice Bennett - Religion - 2004 - 348 pages
...Abundius, Cyrilla, and Triphonia. Although the dating is uncertain, it is believed that it was composed at the end of the fifth and the beginning of the sixth century, which would place it somewhat earlier than St. Donato 's manuscript that was written during... | |
| Peter Rickard - Comparative literature - 1956 - 304 pages
...roving commission as a military commander in charge of operations against Saxon or Pictish invaders at the end of the fifth and the beginning of the sixth century of our era.1 He thus became a popular figure among the Celts and his name soon passed into... | |
| R. Van den Broek - Classical literature - 1972 - 564 pages
...of the Virgin, based on the information provided by the Transitus Marine apocrypha, which appeared at the end of the fifth and the beginning of the sixth century and spread very rapidly.5 In this way the later Assumption of the Holy Virgin developed from... | |
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