Emperor ★Mõ?ø★

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Abstract - Emperor is a movie starring Keean Johnson, James Cromwell, and Bruce Dern. An escaped slave travels north and has chance encounters with Frederick Douglass and John Brown. Based on the life story of Shields Green
directors - Mark Amin
country - USA
cast - James Cromwell
Emperor forneus.
Emperor rum. Amazing thing when the rain stopped and Rainbow appeared during the emperor's speech! Trully, the Godess of rain, sun and sky agreed to make this new Emperor and Empress enthronement celebration Magical. Emperor hirohito. Emperor palpatine laugh.
Emperor palpatine rise of skywalker. Emperors. Emperor movie. Emperor before hadrian. Emperor's new groove cast.
Emperors new groove. Emperor crimson vs metallic. Emperor's theme. Still love how 5 years for this whole trilogy Not complaining I love Brendon and the songs That just means... I've been a fan for 5 years. Emperor justinian. Emperor palpatine actor. English [ edit] Alternative forms [ edit] emperour ( obsolete) Etymology [ edit] From Middle English emperour, borrowed from Anglo-Norman emperour and Old French empereor (Modern French empereur), from Latin imperātor ( “ emperor; commander ”), from imperāre ( “ to command ”). Doublet of imperator. Pronunciation [ edit] ( Received Pronunciation) IPA ( key): /??mp???/, /??mp??/ ( General American) IPA ( key): /??mp???/, /??mp??/ ( General New Zealand) IPA ( key): /?emp???/, /?emp??/ Noun [ edit] emperor ( plural emperors) The male monarch or ruler of an empire. (Can we date this quote by Sri Ramana Maharishi and provide title, author's full name, and other details? ) Even an emperor is no match for a man with no wants. Any monarch ruling an empire, irrespective of gender, with "empress" contrasting to mean when consort to emperor 1994 Het Spinhuis, Transactions: Essays in Honor of Jeremy F. Boissevain In 690 Wu usurped the throne and became Emperor herself, which proved a unique event in the history of China. 2002 The Heritage of World Civilizations: To 1700 page 226 After his death in 683 she ruled for seven years as regent and then, deposing her son, became emperor herself, the only woman in Chinese history to hold the title. 2008 Encyclopedia of Barbarian Europe: Society in Transformation page 211 Empress, imperial regent, and even emperor herself (r. 797?802), Irene was an important and powerful figure at the Byzantine court in the late eighth and early ninth century. 2013 Voyages in World History page 213 Originally the wife of the emperor, she engineered the imperial succession so that she could serve first as regent to a boy emperor and then as emperor herself. 2016, Commander Pakydus, "Sindbad & the 7 Galaxies" Where is Sindbad? I have a summons for him direct from the galactic emperor herself. He is to be brought here immediately to give an explanation for his recent actions. ( political theory) Specifically, the ruler of the Holy Roman Empire; the world-monarch. The Investiture Controversy was a conflict between the Emperor and the Pope. The fourth trump or major arcana card of the tarot deck. A large, relatively valuable marble in children's games. 2001, Paul Webley, The economic psychology of everyday life, page 39: But marbles are not only used to play games: they are also traded. In this market, the value of the different kinds of marbles (oilies, emperors, etc. ) is determined by local supply and demand and not by the price of the marbles [ …] Any fish of the family Lethrinidae. ( entomology) Any various butterflies of the subfamily Charaxinae. Usage notes [ edit] An emperor is generally addressed as His Imperial Majesty. Hyponyms [ edit] barracks emperor Derived terms [ edit] [ edit] Translations [ edit] ruler of an empire Albanian: perandor ? (sq) ? m Arabic: ??????? ?? m ( qay?ar), ????????????? ?? m ( ?imbrā?ūr) Armenian: ????? ? (hy) ( kaysr) Old Armenian: ????? ( kaysr), ????? ( kesar) Aromanian: ampirat ? m Asturian: emperador ? m Azerbaijani: imperator Belarusian: імпера?тар ? m ( impjerátar), цар ? m ( car) ( tsar) Bengali: ?????? ( sômra?) Breton: impalaer ? (br) Bulgarian: импера?тор ? (bg) ? m ( imperátor), цар ? (bg) ? m ( car) ( tsar) Burmese: ?????? ? (my) () Catalan: emperador ? (ca) ? m Chinese: Cantonese: 皇帝 ( wong 4 dai 3) Dungan: хуонди ( huondi), хуоншон ( huonšon) Mandarin: 皇帝 ? (zh) ( huángdì), 帝王 ? (zh) ( dìwáng), 天皇 ? (zh) ( tiānhuáng) ( of Japan), 皇上 ? (zh) ( huángshang) Czech: císař ? (cs) ? m Danish: kejser ? (da) ? c Dutch: keizer ? (nl) ? m Esperanto: imperiestro Estonian: keiser ? (et), imperaator Extremaduran: emperaol ? m Finnish: keisari ? (fi) French: empereur ? (fr) ? m Friulian: imperadôr ? m Galician: emperador ? m Georgian: ?????????? ( im?era?ori) German: Kaiser ? (de) ? m, Imperator ? (de) ? m Greek: αυτοκράτορας ? (el) ? m ( aftokrátoras) Ancient: α?τοκράτωρ ? m ( autokrátōr), κα?σαρ ? m ( kaîsar), α?τάναξ ? m ( autánax) Hebrew: ???? \ ?????? ? ? (he) ? m ( kesár, keysár) Hindi: ?????? ? m ( samrā?) Hungarian: császár ? (hu) Icelandic: keisari ? (is) ? m Ido: cezaro ? (io), imperiestro ? (io) Indonesian: kaisar ? (id), maharaja ? (id) Interlingua: imperator Irish: impire ? m Italian: imperatore ? (it) ? m Japanese: 皇帝 ? (ja) ( こうてい, kōtei) ( emperor in general), 帝王 ? (ja) ( ていおう, teiō) ( general term for emperor or monarch), 天皇 ? (ja) ( てんのう, tennō) ( emperor of Japan) Kazakh: император ( ïmperator) Khmer: ?????? ? (km) ( ?a?thiri?c), ????????? ( ri?ci? thiri?c), ?????? ? (km) ( s?mraac) Korean: ?? ? (ko) ( hwangje), ?? ? (ko) ( cheonhwang) (of Japan) Kurdish: Kurmanji: emperator ? (ku), qeyser ? (ku) Kyrgyz: император ? (ky) ( imperator) Lao: ???????? ( chak ka phat), ???????? ( chak ka wat), ????? ( n? rin), ????? ( n? lin), ????? ( rā sēn) Latin: imperātor ? (la) ? m Latvian: imperators ? m, ķeizars ? m Lithuanian: imperatorius ? m, ciesorius ? m Low German: German Low German: Kaiser Luxembourgish: Keeser ? m Macedonian: импера?тор ? m ( imperátor), цар ? m ( car) ( tsar) Malay: kaisar, maharaja, khakan Malayalam: ?????????? ( sāmrā??ŭ) Mandinka: mansa Manx: ard-ree ? m Maori: emepara, epara Marathi: ?????? ? m ( samrā?) Middle English: emperour Mongolian: эзэн хаан ( ezen haan) Norman: empéreu ? m ( Jersey) Norwegian: Bokmål: keiser ? (no) ? m Nynorsk: keisar ? m Occitan: emperador ? (oc) ? m Old Occitan: emperador Old English: cāsere ? m Persian: ???????? ? ? (fa) ( emperâtor) Polish: imperator ? (pl) ? m, cesarz ? (pl) ? m Portuguese: imperador ? (pt) ? m Punjabi: ????? ? (pa) ( samrā?) Quechua: qhapaq Romanian: împărat ? (ro) ? m Romansch: imperatur ? m, imperataur ? m, imperatour ? m, caiser ? m Russian: импера?тор ? (ru) ? m ( imperátor), царь ? (ru) ? m ( car?) ( tsar) Sanskrit: ?????? ? (sa) ? m ( adhirāja), ??????? ? (sa) ? m ( samrāj) Scottish Gaelic: ìmpire ? m Serbo-Croatian: Cyrillic: ца?р ? m, имп?ра?тор ? m, це?са?р ? m Latin: c?r ? (sh) ? m, impèrātor ? (sh) ? m, c?sār ? (sh) ? m Sicilian: mpiraturi Slovak: cisár ? (sk) ? m, cár ? (sk) ? m ( of Russia, Bulgaria) Slovene: cêsar ? (sl) ? m, imperátor ? m Sorbian: Lower Sorbian: kejžor ? m Upper Sorbian: kejžor ? m Spanish: emperador ? (es) ? m Swahili: kaisari Swedish: kejsare ? (sv) ? c Tagalog: baginda, emperador ? (tl) Tajik: император ( imperator) Telugu: ????????? ? (te) ( cakravarti) Thai: ????????? ( jàk-grà-pát), ??????? ( h??ng-dtêe) ( emperor of China) Turkish: imparator ? (tr), ilhan ? (tr) Turkmen: imperator Ukrainian: імпера?тор ? m ( imperátor), цар ? (uk) ? m ( car) ( tsar) Urdu: ????? ?? m ( samrā?) Uzbek: imperator ? (uz) Venetian: inperadore ? m, inperador ? m Vietnamese: hoàng đ? ? (vi), thiên hoàng ( of Japan) Vilamovian: kazer ? m Walloon: impreur ? (wa) ? m Welsh: ymerawdwr ? m Yiddish: ?????? ?? m ( keyser), ????????????? ?? m ( imperator) fourth trump or major arcana card Anagrams [ edit] per orem.
Emperor penguin. Kick donkey ganti IOS langsung jadi EVOS SEASON 2 VS EVOS SEASON 5. BO 3 MANTAP. Emperor caligula. Emperor dnb. Ihsahn, the Eric Clapton of metal \m. Emperor king vision. Emperor of japan. Emperor akihito. Emperor hadrian. Emperors palace. Emperor of the Roman Empire Imperial Vexillum of the Emperor First to command Augustus 16 January 27 BC ? 19 August AD 14 Details Style Imperator, Augustus, Caesar, Princeps, Dominus Noster, Autokrator or Basileus (depending on period) First?monarch Augustus Last?monarch Theodosius I ( Unified or Classical), Julius Nepos ( Western), Constantine VI ( Universally recognized), Constantine XI ( Eastern) Formation 16 January 27 BC Abolition 17 January 395 AD (Unified or Classical), 22 June 480 AD (Western), 29 May 1453 AD (Eastern) Appointer Roman Senate (officially) and/or Roman Military Pretender(s) none The Roman emperor was the ruler of the Roman Empire during the imperial period (starting in 27 BC). The emperors used a variety of different titles throughout history. Often when a given Roman is described as becoming "emperor" in English, it reflects his taking of the title Augustus or Caesar. Another title often used was imperator, originally a military honorific. Early Emperors also used the title Princeps Civitatis ('first citizen'). Emperors frequently amassed republican titles, notably princeps senatus, consul and pontifex maximus. The legitimacy of an emperor's rule depended on his control of the army and recognition by the Senate; an emperor would normally be proclaimed by his troops, or invested with imperial titles by the Senate, or both. The first emperors reigned alone; later emperors would sometimes rule with co-emperors and divide administration of the empire between them. The Romans considered the office of emperor to be distinct from that of a king. The first emperor, Augustus, resolutely refused recognition as a monarch. [1] Although Augustus could claim that his power was authentically republican, his successors, Tiberius and Nero, could not convincingly make the same claim. [2] Nonetheless, for the first three hundred years of Roman emperors, from Augustus until Diocletian, efforts were made to portray the emperors as leaders of a republic. From Diocletian, whose tetrarchic reforms also divided the position into one emperor in the West and one in the East, until the end of the Empire, emperors ruled in an openly monarchic style [3] and did not preserve the nominal principle of a republic, but the contrast with "kings" was maintained: although the imperial succession was generally hereditary, it was only hereditary if there was a suitable candidate acceptable to the army and the bureaucracy, [4] so the principle of automatic inheritance was not adopted. Elements of the republican institutional framework (senate, consuls, and magistrates) were preserved even after the end of the Western Empire. The peaceful reign of Constantine the Great, the first to openly convert to Christianity and allowing freedom of religion, witnessed the replacement of the Caput Mundi from Rome to Constantinople. The Western Roman Empire collapsed in the late 5th century after multiple invasions of imperial territory by Germanic barbarian tribes. Romulus Augustulus is often considered to be the last emperor of the West after his forced abdication in 476, although Julius Nepos maintained a claim recognized by the Eastern Empire to the title until his death in 480. Following Nepos' death, the Eastern Emperor Zeno abolished the division of the position and proclaimed himself as the sole Emperor of a reunited Roman Empire. Emperor Heraclius made diplomatic relations with the Companions of the Prophet Muhammad, but lost many territories after successful Islamic conquests. The Eastern imperial lineage continued to rule from Constantinople ("New Rome"); they continued to style themselves as Emperor of the Romans (later βασιλεύς ?ωμαίων in Greek), but are often referred to in modern scholarship as Byzantine emperors. Constantine XI Palaiologos was the last Roman emperor in Constantinople, dying in the Fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Empire 's Mehmed II in 1453. The Muslim rulers then claimed the title of Caesar of Rome. The "Byzantine" emperors from Heraclius in 629 and onwards adopted the title of basileus ( βασιλεύς), which had originally meant king in Greek but became a title reserved solely for the Roman emperor and the ruler of the Sasanian Empire. Other kings were then referred to as rēgas. [5] In addition to their pontifical office, some emperors were given divine status after death. With the eventual hegemony of Christianity, the emperor came to be seen as God's chosen ruler, as well as a special protector and leader of the Christian Church on Earth, although in practice an emperor's authority on Church matters was subject to challenge. Due to the cultural rupture of the Turkish conquest, most western historians treat Constantine XI as the last meaningful claimant to the title Roman Emperor. From 1453, one of the titles used by the Ottoman Sultans was "Caesar of Rome" (Turkish: Kayser-i Rum) [6], part of their titles until the Ottoman Empire ended in 1922. A Byzantine group of claimant Roman emperors existed in the Empire of Trebizond until its conquest by the Ottomans in 1461, though they had used a modified title since 1282. Eastern emperors in Constantinople had been recognized and accepted as Roman emperors both in the East, which they ruled, and by the Papacy and Germanic kingdoms of the West until the deposition of Constantine VI and accession of Irene of Athens as Empress regnant in 797. Objecting to a woman ruling the Roman Empire in her own right and issues with the eastern clergy, the Papacy would then create a rival lineage of Roman emperors in western Europe, the Holy Roman Emperors, which ruled the Holy Roman Empire for most of the period between 800 and 1806. These Emperors were never recognized as Roman emperors by the court in Constantinople and their coronations resulted in the medieval problem of two emperors. Background and beginning [ edit] Statue of Augustus, c. 30 BC?20 BC; this statue is located in the Louvre Modern historians conventionally regard Augustus as the first Emperor whereas Julius Caesar is considered the last dictator of the Roman Republic, a view having its origins in the Roman writers Plutarch, Tacitus and Cassius Dio. [7] However, the majority of Roman writers, including Josephus, Pliny the Younger, Suetonius and Appian, as well as most of the ordinary people of the Empire, thought of Julius Caesar as the first Emperor. [8] At the end of the Roman Republic no new, and certainly no single, title indicated the individual who held supreme power. Insofar as emperor could be seen as the English translation of imperator, then Julius Caesar had been an emperor, like several Roman generals before him. Instead, by the end of the civil wars in which Julius Caesar had led his armies, it became clear that there was certainly no consensus to return to the old-style monarchy, but that the period when several officials, bestowed with equal power by the senate, would fight one another had come to an end. Julius Caesar, and then Augustus after him, accumulated offices and titles of the highest importance in the Republic, making the power attached to those offices permanent, and preventing anyone with similar aspirations from accumulating or maintaining power for themselves. However, Julius Caesar, unlike those after him, did so without the Senate's vote and approval. [ citation needed] Julius Caesar held the Republican offices of consul four times and dictator five times, was appointed dictator in perpetuity ( dictator perpetuo) in 45 BC and had been "pontifex maximus" for a long period. He gained these positions by senatorial consent and just prior to his assassination, was the most powerful man in the Roman world. In his will, Caesar appointed his adopted son Octavian as his heir. On Caesar's death, Octavian inherited his adoptive father's property and lineage, the loyalty of most of his allies and ? again through a formal process of senatorial consent ? an increasing number of the titles and offices that had accrued to Caesar. A decade after Caesar's death, Octavian's victory over his erstwhile ally Mark Antony at Actium put an end to any effective opposition and confirmed Octavian's supremacy. In 27 BC, Octavian appeared before the Senate and offered to retire from active politics and government; the Senate not only requested he remain, but increased his powers and made them lifelong, awarding him the title of Augustus (the elevated or divine one, somewhat less than a god but approaching divinity). Augustus stayed in office until his death; the sheer breadth of his superior powers as princeps and permanent imperator of Rome's armies guaranteed the peaceful continuation of what nominally remained a republic. His "restoration" of powers to the Senate and the people of Rome was a demonstration of his auctoritas and pious respect for tradition. Some later historians such as Tacitus would say that even at Augustus' death, the true restoration of the Republic might have been possible. Instead, Augustus actively prepared his adopted son Tiberius to be his successor and pleaded his case to the Senate for inheritance on merit. The Senate disputed the issue but eventually confirmed Tiberius as princeps. Once in power, Tiberius took considerable pains to observe the forms and day-to-day substance of republican government. Classical period [ edit] Ancient Rome This article is part of a series on the politics and government of ancient Rome Periods Roman Kingdom 753?509 BC Roman Republic 509?27 BC Roman Empire 27 BC ? AD 395 Principate Dominate Western AD 395?476 Eastern AD 395?1453 Timeline Roman Constitution Constitution of the Kingdom Constitution of the Republic Constitution of the Empire Constitution
Emperor pilaf. This is a song for mountainous terrain. Emperor's new groove. Emperor palpatine do it. It was nice they realised they had overdone the a-choir thing. Or at least Ihsahn did. Samoth interview, Scream mag-99) This album is perfect in all aspects; the progressive songwriting. the amazing riffing,unique synth work,and a perfect production according to 1999 standards. The ultima-perfectum song on this album: The Source of Icon E. Emperor movie 2020. Emperor. Emperor qin. Emperor text to speech. Emperor gaming. Emperor's new. Emperor arrives at death star. Emperor of china.

I heard blackmetal since '97 til many other bm bands since Mayhem made it rose to fame... EMPEROR IS MY NO. 1 ALLTIME FAVORITE BLACKMETAL BAND UNTIL THE DAY I DIE :metal. Emperor emhyr. Emperor palpatine theme. Emperor ???. Emperor of mankind. Emperor tamarin. Emperor scorpion. Emperor palpatine robot chicken. Emperor penguin facts. Emperor cubone. This is almost as lame as Mayhem. :middle_finger. Is it me or do war films just get worse these days? Come on Spielberg and Tom Hanks lets have one more great mini series! Possibly set in Vietnam. Emperor theme.

Emperor full album. Emperor palpatine death. When the skulls sing it sounds like a Tim Burton movie. Emperor& 39;s new clothes. Emperor constantine. Emperor live. Emperortigerstar.

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  1. Publisher - EMPEROR de WAJ
  2. Bio: talk that talk?// A.O.E? ?// #Medic ? // Abun tarko neh??// MUFC??// Patriot??.

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