Common Era/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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==Parent topics== | ==Parent topics== |
Revision as of 15:52, 11 September 2009
- See also changes related to Common Era, or pages that link to Common Era or to this page or whose text contains "Common Era".
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- Asanga [r]: (無着, also called Aryasanga; born c. 300 C.E.) A cofounder, with brother Vasubandhu, of Yogācāra Buddhism. [e]
- Augustine of Hippo [r]: (November 13 354–August 28 430) Bishop and Doctor of the Church. [e]
- Classics [r]: A branch of the Humanities dealing with language, literature, history, art, and other aspects of the ancient Mediterranean world. [e]
- Confessions (Augustine) [r]: Autobiography of Augustine of Hippo, written around 400 CE. [e]
- Enheduana [r]: (23rd century BCE) Akkadian princess, religious leader, and author of hymns; daughter of King Sargon. [e]
- Genesis [r]: First book of the Torah and the Hebrew Bible. [e]
- Genghis Khan [r]: (c. 1162-1227) the founder and most successful ruler of the Mongolian Empire, the largest contiguous land empire in history. [e]
- Infanticide [r]: Intentionally causing the death of an infant [e]
- Judaism [r]: Monotheistic religion of the Jewish people based on the Torah. [e]
- Lyceum (Aristotle) [r]: Grove and gymnasium near Athens, sacred to Apollo Lyceius, where Aristotle taught philosophy, and whose members were the Peripatetics. [e]
- Manichaeism [r]: Religious movement popular in Persia and the Middle East circa. third century CE, combining Zoroastrian and Christian beliefs. Beliefs are broadly dualistic, seeing the world as being a battle between good and evil. [e]
- Pythagoras [r]: Greek mathematician and thinker of the 6th century BCE. [e]
- Pythagorean comma [r]: a microtonal musical interval, named after the Greek mathematician Pythagoras. [e]
- Socrates [r]: (ca. 470–399 BCE) Greek philosopher who is credited with laying the foundations of western philosophy; sentenced to death in Athens for heresy. [e]
- Strato of Lampsacus [r]: Greek philosopher, the third head of the Lyceum, following Aristotle's successor Theophrastus in about 286 BCE. [e]
- Theatre (building) [r]: A structure in which theatrical or dramatic works, often simply called "plays," are performed. [e]
- Theories of religion [r]: Set of theories which examine the origins of religion, classified into substantive (focusing on what it is) theories and functional or reductionist (focusing on what religions does) theories. [e]