Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Floruit ([fluˈɾɥit]; sovent compendi «fl.», ocasionalament «flor.») es una expression latina emplegada coma indicacion temporala aproximativa, particularament dins las biografias e cronologias, per referir lo periòde durant lo qual una persona, una comunitat, èra activa.

  2. May 13, 2024 · floruit (often abbreviated fl. or occasionally, flor. ) Latin meaning "he/she flourished", and denotes a date or period during which a person was known to have been alive or active. In English, the word may also be used as a noun indicating the time when someone "flourished", e.g. a period in life when an author of taxa was the most active.

  3. Candidus (fl. 793–802) Candidus was the name given to the Anglo-Saxon Wizo or Witto by Alcuin, whose scholar he was and with whom he went in 782 to Gaul. He is author of several philosophical texts wrongly attributed by earlier scholars to the benedictinian monk Brun Candidus of Fulda, the author of the vita of Abott Eigil of Fulda.

  4. Arms of Strode of Newnham: Argent, a chevron between three conies courant sable. Richard Strode ( floruit 1512) was in 1512 a Member of Parliament for Plympton Erle, Devon and was also involved in the tin mining industry. He is best known for having instigated Strode's case, one of the earliest and most important English legal cases dealing ...

  5. Origins. He was a son of Walter Reynell (fl. 1404) of Malston in the parish of Sherford, Devon, and of Badlingham in Cambridgeshire, a Member of Parliament for Devon in 1404, [4] by his second wife Margaret Stighull, [5] daughter and heiress [6] of William Stighull ( alias Styl, Stigill, etc) of Malston and East Ogwell, [7] by his wife ...

  6. la.wikipedia.org › wiki › FloruitFloruit - Vicipaedia

    Floruit, breviter fl. (a florendo), est verbum quod annos vitae hominis indicat, cum anni natalis et mortis incogniti sint. Exempli gratia, scimus Eardwulfum (en) Northumbrorum regem anno 790 floruisse, quamquam nescimus quando natus vel mortuus sit.

  7. Floruit (ლათ. flōruit [ˈflɔːrʊɪt] — „ფლორუიტ“ < flōreō, flōrēre; შემოკლებით fl. ან flor. ...

  1. People also search for