Ramses II - tradução para alemão
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Ramses II - tradução para alemão

ANCIENT EGYPTIAN STATUE
Ramesses II Statue; Colossus of ramesses ii; Statue of Ramses II (Mit Rahina); Statue of Ramesses II (Mit Rahina); Colossus of Ramses II
  • Statue of Ramesses II in the entrance hall of the Grand Egyptian Museum during construction (November 2019)
  • Heliopolis]], [[Cairo]]

Ramses II      
Raamses II, (died 1225 BC)
Friedrich II         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Friedrich II; Fredrick II; Frederick II (disambiguation); Frederik II; Frederik II (disambiguation)
Friedrich II (1712-86) König Preußens
Montezuma II         
  • Map showing the expansion of the Aztec Empire through conquest. The conquests of Moctezuma II are marked by the colour green (based on the maps by Ross Hassig in ''Aztec Warfare'').
  • Baptism of Ixtlilxochitl II, by José Vivar y Valderrama
  • Cacamatzin as ''tlatoani'' of Texcoco. Florentine Codex
  • Colonial copy of a portrait of Hernán Cortés dated to the year 1525.
  • War with Cuatzontlan. Durán Codex
  • Moctezuma's coronation according to the [[Durán Codex]]
  • New-Spanish]] artists Juan González and Miguel González
  • 5 suns]] of the Aztec are indicated. They are significant in their timeline of Aztec civilization. Each sun represents the belief of the Aztec people that the world has gone through 5 distinct cycles of creation and destruction. One should read the stone starting with the first sun in the bottom right and moving counterclockwise (following the blue arrows in the annotation). The 5th sun in the center of the stone represents the present era of the Aztec.  
  • Folios 30 to 31 (right to left) of [[Codex Azoyú 1]] depicting the campaigns launched by Moctezuma II in Tlapanec lands
  • Coat of arms of the Dukes de Moctezuma de Tultengo (Descendientes del Emperador Mexica Moctezuma II)
  • ''Tequihua'' spies gathering information on an enemy city during the night. Codex Mendoza
  • Moctezuma's ancestry as depicted in a 1566 manuscript
  • Celebrations during Moctezuma's coronation according to the Durán Codex
  • Francisco Javier Girón y Ezpeleta Duque de Ahumada
  • The massacre of Mexica merchants in Quetzaltepec. Durán Codex
  • url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_YvgCwAAQBAJ}}</ref>
  • Moctezuma II receiving the Huexotzinca embassy requesting for aid against the Tlaxcalans. Durán Codex
  • Moctezuma II in the ''[[Codex Mendoza]]''
  • Moctezuma's Palace from the ''[[Codex Mendoza]]'' (1542)
  • Montezuma II
  • Moctezuma II, from ''Les vrais pourtraits et vies des hommes illustres'', Paris 1584
  • Nezahualpilli's funeral, according to the Durán Codex
  • Nezahualpilli (right) telling Moctezuma about the omens warning the destruction of the empire, according to the Durán Codex
  • Cuauhtémoc borough]]
  • Then-prince Moctezuma the Younger arriving to the rescue of the merchants who were put under siege during the conquest of Ayotlan, according to the [[Florentine Codex]]. The merchants are seen talking to Moctezuma, informing him about the end of the war
  • Anonymous portrait of Moctezuma II, 17th century.
  • Location of Moctezuma's palace (left) south of the central plaza of Tenochtitlan and the ''Totocalli'' (down) next to it in a map likely made by Hernán Cortés
  • Stone of the Five Suns, a stone with inscriptions in [[Nahuatl writing]] depicting the date 15 July 1503 in the Aztec calendar. Some historians believe this to be the date in which Moctezuma was crowned
  • Genealogy of Tecuichpoch
  • Campaigns launched by the Mexica over the Tlapanec Kingdom of Tlachinollan, including the conquest of Tototepec by Moctezuma II. The map doesn't show his campaigns against Xipetepec, Acocozpan, Tetenanco and Atlitepec
  • Death and cremation of Moctezuma as depicted in the [[Florentine Codex]], Book 12
  • The ''Totocalli'' as depicted in the Florentine Codex
  • Moctezuma captured and imprisoned by Cortés
  • Moctezuma's military victories listed in [[Codex Mendoza]]
9TH TLATOANI OF TENOCHTITLAN AND RULER OF THE AZTEC TRIPLE ALLIANCE (1466-1520)
Montezuma II; Moctezuma Xocoyotzin; Motecuhzoma II; Motecuhzoma Xocoyotzin; Muteczuma II; Muteczuma Rex
Montezuma II, (1466-1520) letzter Aztekenführer vor der spanischen Invasion von Hernando Cortez in 1520 geführt

Definição

Pentium II
<processor> Intel Corporation's successor to the {Pentium Pro}. The Pentium II can execute all the instructions of all the earlier members of the Intel 80x86 processor family. There are four versions targetted at different user markets. The Celeron is the simplest and cheapest. The standard Pentium II is aimed at mainstream home and business users. The Pentium II Xeon is intended for higher performance business servers. There is also a mobile version of the Pentium II for use in portable computers. All versions of the Pentium II are packaged on a special daughterboard that plugs into a card-edge processor slot on the motherboard. The daughterboard is enclosed within a rectangular black box called a Single Edge Contact (SEC) cartridge. The budget Celeron may be sold as a card only without the box. Consumer line Pentium II's require a 242-pin slot called Slot 1. The Xeon uses a 330-pin slot called Slot 2. Intel refers to Slot 1 and Slot 2 as SEC-242 and SEC-330 in some of their technical documentation. The daughterboard has mounting points for the Pentium II CPU itself plus various support chips and cache memory chips. All components on the daughterboard are normally permanently soldered in place. Previous generation Socket 7 motherboards cannot normally be upgraded to accept the Pentium II, so it is necessary to install a new motherboard. All Pentium II processors have Multimedia Extensions (MMX) and integrated Level One and Level Two cache controllers. Additional features include Dynamic Execution and Dual Independent Bus Architecture, with separate 64 bit system and cache busses. Pentium II is a superscalar CPU having about 7.5 million transistors. The first Pentium II's produced were code named Klamath. They were manufactured using a 0.35 micron process and supported clock rates of 233, 266, 300 and 333 MHz at a bus speed of 66 MHz. Second generation Pentium II's, code named Deschutes, are made with a 0.25 micron process and support rates of 350, 400 and 450 MHz at a bus speed of 100 MHz. http://intel.com/PentiumII/. (1998-10-06)

Wikipédia

Statue of Ramesses II

The Statue of Ramesses II is a 3,200-year-old figure of Ramesses II, depicting him standing. It was discovered in 1820 by Giovanni Battista Caviglia at the Great Temple of Ptah near Memphis, Egypt. It is made from limestone and weighs 83 tons.

The statue was found broken in six pieces and earlier attempts at restoration failed. In 1955, Egyptian Prime Minister Gamal Abdel Nasser moved it to the large Bab Al-Hadid Square in Cairo, outside Cairo's main railway station; the square was then renamed Ramses Square. There the statue was restored to its full height of 11 meters and erected on a three-metre pedestal at the edge of a fountain. It was stabilized by iron bars inside the body.

Over time Ramses Square turned out to be an unsuitable location, as the statue was exposed to corrosive pollution and constant vibration from traffic and subways. The Egyptian government decided to relocate it to a more appropriate location in 2006. At a temporary site on the Giza Plateau it underwent restoration before being moved to the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM) in Giza in 2018.

The transportation of the statue from Ramses Square to Giza was a technological challenge that had been in the planning since 2002. A replica had been made and was transported several weeks before the scheduled actual move along the planned route to Giza to test the proposed relocation process. The move took place on August 25, 2006. During its ten-hour transport the statue was wrapped and covered in rubber foam. Two flat-back trucks carried the weight of the statue and its support structures as it travelled in a vertical position.

The move has been criticized for its costs and the concern about pollution in the Giza location.