Carl the Great - translation to ιταλικό
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Carl the Great - translation to ιταλικό

KING OF FRANKS, REGARDED AS THE FIRST HOLY ROMAN EMPEROR (747–814)
Charlimagne; Charlimaine; Charlamaine; Charlemaine; Charles the Great; Karl der Grosse; Charles I, Holy Roman Emperor; Charles I of France; Charlemange; Carolus Magnus; Emperor Charles I; Carl the Great; Karl der große; Charlesmagne; Charlemagne the great; December 25, 800 AD; Karl der Große; Carlo the Great; Regina (concubine of Charlemagne); Emperor of the West and Frankish king Charles I; Gisela, daugher of Charlemagne; Charlegmagne; Emperor Charlemagne; Charlemegne; Charlemagn; Karl der grosse; Karl I der Große; Karolus Magnus; Charlmagne; Frankish king Charles I; Charles I of Aquitaine; Carlomagno; Carolus I; Saint Charles the Great; Charlemain; Karl I, Holy Roman Emperor; Karl the Great; Descent from Charlemagne; Charles le Magne; Charlemagne to the mughals; Pater Europae; Charlemange, Holy Roman Emperor; Charlemagne in Spain; 800 in Germany; Karel de Grote; Karel the Great; CAROLVS MAGNVS; Blessed Charlemagne; Regina (concubine); Madelgard
  • Benevento]]
  • Charlemagne's chapel]] at [[Aachen Cathedral]]
  • [[Proserpina sarcophagus]] of Charlemagne in the [[Aachen Cathedral Treasury]]
  • The [[Throne of Charlemagne]] and the subsequent German Kings in [[Aachen Cathedral]], Germany
  • [[Moorish]] [[Hispania]] in 732
  • skull cap]], is located at [[Aachen Cathedral Treasury]], and can be regarded as the most famous depiction of the ruler.
  • Charlemagne receiving the submission of [[Widukind]] at [[Paderborn]] in 785, painted c. 1840 by [[Ary Scheffer]]
  • Equestrian statue of Charlemagne]]'' by [[Agostino Cornacchini]] (1725), [[St. Peter's Basilica]], [[Vatican City]].
  • The Frankish king Charlemagne was a devout Christian and maintained a close relationship with the papacy throughout his life. In 772, when [[Pope Adrian I]] was threatened by invaders, the king rushed to Rome to provide assistance. Shown here, the pope asks Charlemagne for help at a meeting near Rome.
  • frameless
  • chignon]] hairstyle.
  • Denier from the era of Charlemagne, [[Tours]], 793–812
  • Charlemagne instructing his son [[Louis the Pious]]
  • Later depiction of Charlemagne in the [[Bibliothèque Nationale de France]]
  • equestrian statuette]] thought to represent Charlemagne (from [[Metz Cathedral]], now in the Louvre)
  • Page from the [[Lorsch Gospels]] of Charlemagne's reign
  • Coronation of an idealised king, depicted in the Sacramentary of [[Charles the Bald]] (about 870)
  • ''Emperor Charlemagne'', by [[Albrecht Dürer]], 1511–1513, [[Germanisches Nationalmuseum]]
  • Europe at the death of the Charlemagne 814.
  • Francia, early 8th century}}
  • Charlemagne's additions to the [[Frankish Kingdom]]
  • [[Harun al-Rashid]] receiving a delegation of Charlemagne in [[Baghdad]], by Julius Köckert (1864)
  • One of a chain of [[Middle Welsh]] legends about Charlemagne: ''Ystorya de Carolo Magno'' from the ''[[Red Book of Hergest]]'' ([[Jesus College, Oxford]], MS 111), 14th century
  • Coronation of Charlemagne, drawing by [[Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld]]
  • [[Pope Leo III]], crowning Charlemagne from ''Chroniques de France ou de Saint Denis'', vol. 1; France, second quarter of 14th century.
  • Charlemagne (left) and [[Pepin the Hunchback]] (10th-century copy of 9th-century original)
  • Karoli gloriosissimi regis}}
  • Frederick II's]] gold and silver casket for Charlemagne, the [[Karlsschrein]]
  • Imperial Coronation of Charlemagne, by [[Friedrich Kaulbach]], 1861
  • The privileges of Charlemagne at the [[Modena Cathedral]] (containing the [[monogram]] of Charlemagne), dated 782
  • ''[[The Coronation of Charlemagne]]'', by assistants of [[Raphael]], c. 1516–1517
  • A portion of the 814 death [[shroud]] of Charlemagne. It represents a [[quadriga]] and was manufactured in [[Constantinople]]. [[Musée de Cluny]], Paris.
  • 13th-century stained glass depiction of Charlemagne, [[Strasbourg Cathedral]]

Carl the Great         
Carlo magno (re di Francia)
Carl Friedrich Gauss         
  • heliotrope]] (background: mathematical signs) and a section of the [[triangulation network]]
  • German 10-[[Deutsche Mark]] [[Banknote]] (1993; discontinued) with formula and graph of normal distribution (background: some Göttingen buildings); portrait as mirror image of the Jensen portrait
  • Lithography by [[Siegfried Bendixen]] (1828)
  • Brunswick]]
  • House of birth in Brunswick (destroyed in World War II)
  • German Research Centre for Geosciences]] in [[Potsdam]]
  • Gauss on his deathbed (1855)
  • [[Copley Medal]] for Gauss (1838)
  • Caricature of Abraham Gotthelf Kästner by Gauss (1795)
  • Carl Friedrich Gauß 1803 by Johann Christian August Schwartz
  • Title page of Gauss' magnum opus, ''[[Disquisitiones Arithmeticae]]''
  • [[Gauss's diary]] entry related to sum of triangular numbers (1796)
  • Portrait of Gauss in Volume II of "''Carl Friedrich Gauss Werke''," 1876
  • Title page of ''Intensitas vis Magneticae Terrestris ad Mensuram Absolutam Revocata''
  • Title page of ''Theoria Motus Corporum Coelestium in sectionibus conicis solem ambientium''
  • Title page to the English Translation of ''Theoria Motus'' by [[Charles Henry Davis]] (1857)
  • Parochial registration]] of Gauss' birth
  • [[Survey marker]] stone in Garlste (now [[Garlstedt]])
  • Old observatory (circa 1800)
  • Albani Cemetery]] in [[Göttingen]], Germany
  • Gauss-Weber monument in Göttingen
  • Gauss' second wife Wilhelmine Waldeck
  • Ludwig Becker]]
GERMAN MATHEMATICIAN AND PHYSICIST (1777–1855)
Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss; Karl Gauss; Carl Frederich Gauss; Karl Friedrich Gauss; Carl Gauss; C. F. Gauss; Carl F. Gauss; Carl Friedrich Gauß; Johann Friedrich Karl Gauss; C.F. Gauss; Carl friedrich gauss; Carl Friederich Gauss; C. F. Gauß; Guass; CF Gauss; Karl Friedrich Gauß; Carl Freidrich Gauss; Johann Carl Friedrich Gauß; Carl Gauß; Friedrich gauss; Gauss; Johann Karl Friedrich Gauss; Carolus Fridericus Gauss; Princeps mathematicorum; Religious views of Carl Friedrich Gauss; Gauß, Johann Carl Friedrich; Carl Friedrich Gausz
Carl Friederich Gauss (1777-1855), fisico, matematico e astronomo tedesco studioso del magnetismo, elettromagnetismo e ottica
Carl Jung         
  • The [[University of Basel]], where Jung studied between 1895 and 1900
  • C. G. Jung Institute, [[Küsnacht]], Switzerland
  • Original statue of Jung in [[Mathew Street]], Liverpool, a half-body on a plinth captioned "Liverpool is the pool of life"
  • Group photo 1909 in front of [[Clark University]]. Front row, [[Sigmund Freud]], [[G. Stanley Hall]], Carl Jung. Back row, [[Abraham Brill]], [[Ernest Jones]], [[Sándor Ferenczi]].
  • Jung outside Burghölzli in 1910
  • The mythic alchemical philosopher's stone as pictured in ''[[Atalanta Fugiens]]'' Emblem 21
  • The clergy house in Kleinhüningen, Basel where Jung grew up
SWISS PSYCHIATRIST AND PSYCHOTHERAPIST (1875–1961)
C. G. Jung; CG Jung; C.G. Jung; Karl Jung; Dr Carl Gustav Jung; Dr. Carl Gustav Jung; K. G. Jung; Carl jung; Jung, Carl Gustav; Carl G. Jung; Carl Young; C.G.Jung; Jung; Carl Gustav Jung; Dr Carl G. Jung; Karle Gustav II Jung; The Meaning of Psychology for Modern Man; Carl yung; Agent 488; Agathe Jung; Gret Jung; Marianne Jung
n. Carl Jung (1875-1961), psichiatra e psicologo svizzero, allievo di Sigmund Freud ma che in seguito si discostò da lui sviluppando delle teorie sue proprie

Ορισμός

gabbo
1) A short and perhaps subliminal piece of advertising, causing much confusion over what was actually being advertised. Alluding to the show with the same name on The Simpsons.
A: (Watching TV) What on earth was that?
B: I think it was a gabbo ad.
2) Pointless acts of self-inflicted harm.
That stunt was totally gabbo.

Βικιπαίδεια

Charlemagne

Charlemagne ( SHAR-lə-mayn, -⁠MAYN, French: [ʃaʁləmaɲ]) or Charles the Great (Latin: Carolus Magnus; Frankish: Karl; 2 April 747 – 28 January 814), a member of the Carolingian dynasty, was King of the Franks from 768, King of the Lombards from 774, and the Emperor of the Romans from 800. Charlemagne succeeded in uniting the majority of western and central Europe and was the first recognized emperor to rule from western Europe after the fall of the Western Roman Empire around three centuries earlier. The expanded Frankish state that Charlemagne founded was the Carolingian Empire, which is considered the first phase in the history of the Holy Roman Empire. He was canonized by Antipope Paschal III—an act later treated as invalid—and he is now regarded by some as beatified (which is a step on the path to sainthood) in the Catholic Church.

Charlemagne was the eldest son of Pepin the Short and Bertrada of Laon. He was born before their canonical marriage. He became king of the Franks in 768 following his father's death, and was initially co-ruler with his brother Carloman I until the latter's death in 771. As sole ruler, he continued his father's policy towards protection of the papacy and became its sole defender, removing the Lombards from power in northern Italy and leading an incursion into Muslim Spain. He also campaigned against the Saxons to his east, Christianizing them (upon penalty of death) which led to events such as the Massacre of Verden. He reached the height of his power in 800 when he was crowned Emperor of the Romans by Pope Leo III on Christmas Day at Old St. Peter's Basilica in Rome.

Charlemagne has been called the "Father of Europe" (Pater Europae), as he united most of Western Europe for the first time since the classical era of the Roman Empire, as well as uniting parts of Europe that had never been under Frankish or Roman rule. His reign spurred the Carolingian Renaissance, a period of energetic cultural and intellectual activity within the Western Church. The Eastern Orthodox Church viewed Charlemagne less favourably, due to his support of the filioque and the Pope's preference of him as emperor over the Byzantine Empire's first female monarch, Irene of Athens. These and other disputes led to the eventual split of Rome and Constantinople in the Great Schism of 1054.

Charlemagne died in 814 after contracting an infectious lung disease. He was laid to rest in the Aachen Cathedral, in his imperial capital city of Aachen. He married at least four times, and three of his legitimate sons lived to adulthood. Only the youngest of them, Louis the Pious, survived to succeed him. Charlemagne is a direct ancestor of many of Europe's royal houses, including the Capetian dynasty, the Ottonian dynasty, the House of Luxembourg, the House of Ivrea and the House of Habsburg.