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Alphabetical    [«  »]
rode 1
roe-deer 1
rolled 1
roman 47
romans 22
romanus 4
rome 90
Frequency    [«  »]
47 nations
47 order
47 peace
47 roman
47 true
46 army
46 bishopric
St. Bede the Venerable
Ecclesiastical history of England

IntraText - Concordances

roman

   Book, Chapter
1 0, Int | For the history of the Roman mission and of Kent generally, 2 0, Int | introduction, the sending of the Roman mission, and the foundation 3 0, Int | inhabited. The story of the Roman occupation is narrated at 4 0, Int | of Christians during the Roman occupation, in the allusions 5 0, Int | 640 A.D., addressed by the Roman see to the Irish clergy 6 0, Int | Irish are converted to the Roman usages by Adamnan, Abbot 7 0, Int | in the acceptance of the Roman rules with regard to Easter 8 I, II | Julius Caesar was the first Roman that came into Britain. [ 9 I, III | into subjection to the Roman empire; and Vespasian, sent 10 I, III | hands. He also added to the Roman empire the Orcades, which 11 I, III | brought also under the Roman dominion the Isle of Wight, 12 I, III | brought by him upon the Roman state, he almost lost Britain; 13 I, IV | Eleutherus presided over the Roman Church, Lucius, king of 14 I, VI | restored Britain to the Roman empire.~Meanwhile, Diocletian 15 I, XII | they perceived that the Roman soldiers were gone, immediately 16 I, XII | blotted out, and the name of a Roman province, so long renowned 17 I, XIII | Honorius and governed the Roman empire twenty-six years. 18 I, XIII | sent by Celestinus, the Roman pontiff, to the Scots that 19 I, XVI | command of Ambrosius, a Roman. [456 A.D.]~When the army 20 I, XVI | alone, by chance, of the Roman nation had survived the 21 I, XXVI | Ninian and, St. Patrick. The Roman church of St. Martin at 22 I, XXVI | small portions only of the Roman walls remain. Roman bricks 23 I, XXVI | the Roman walls remain. Roman bricks are used as old materials 24 I, XXVII| their history during the Roman occupation. But Christianity 25 I, XXVII| Masses observed in the holy Roman Church, and another in the 26 I, XXVII| brother, the custom of the Roman Church in which you remember 27 I, XXVII| anything, either in the Roman, or the Gallican, or any 28 I, XXVII| certain secular law in the Roman commonwealth allows, that 29 I, XXXII| of old, recovering the Roman commonwealth from the false 30 I, XXXIV| then was at the head of the Roman empire. From that time, 31 II, I | gloriously governed the Roman Apostolic see thirteen years, 32 II, I | Lord." ~ He was by nation a Roman, son of Gordianus, tracing 33 II, I | went to the bishop of the Roman Apostolic see (for he was 34 II, II | to the custom of the holy Roman Apostolic Church; and to 35 II, V | judicial decisions, after the Roman model; which are written 36 II, VII | Boniface, bishop of the Roman Apostolic see, who presided 37 III, IV | obtained the government of the Roman empire, there came into 38 III, XXIX | rightly perceived that the Roman was the Catholic and Apostolic 39 IV, I | bishop they had asked of the Roman prelate was in the kingdom 40 IV, II | Church music, after the Roman use, which he had learned 41 IV, V | so great affection to the Roman Apostolic usages, that he 42 V, XIX | according to the custom of the Roman Apostolic Church, he gave 43 V, XXI | the example of the holy Roman Apostolic Church. Accordingly, 44 V, XXI | in his nation after the Roman manner, promising to dedicate 45 V, XXI | follow the custom of the holy Roman Apostolic Church, in so 46 V, XXIV | the Orkney islands to the Roman empire. [I, 3.]~In the year 47 V, XXIV | Theodore presiding; John, the Roman abbot, was also present.


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