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  1. Siemowit IV ( Ziemowit IV ), also known as Siemowit IV the Younger (pl: Siemowit IV Młodszy; ca. 1353/1356 [1] – 21 January 1426 [2] ), was a Polish prince, member of the Masovian branch of the House of Piast and from 1373 or 1374 Duke of Rawa, and after the division of the paternal inheritance between him and his brother in 1381, ruler over ...

  2. Set cemetery. Siemowit IV (also known as Ziemowit IV) (ca. 1353/1356 – 21 January 1426) was one of the Dukes of Masovia of the old Polish Piast royal family. His domain included the lands of Czersk, Rawa, Sochaczew, Płock and Gostynin. In 1381 he inherited Wisz and in 1387 Bełz. Siemowit IV was the younger son of Siemowit III of Piast ...

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  4. The Greeks brought with them a brand-new concept: the “polis,” or “city-state.”. Among the revolutionary ideas of the polis was the idea of naturalization. In the ancient world, it was not possible to become a citizen of a state if you weren’t born in that state. If you were born in Israel, and you moved to Tyre, or Babylon, or Egypt ...

  5. May 3, 2024 · iemowit III of Masovia (his name also rendered Ziemowit; c. 1320 – 1381) was a prince of Masovia and a co-regent (with his brother Casimir I of Warsaw) of the lands of Warsaw, Czersk, Rawa, Gostynin and other parts of Masovia. Life.

  6. GERA and HOROWITZ: Antiochus IV in Life and Death Antiochus IV's campaign in Egypt, prompted M. J. Geller to suggest5 that the procession in the diary for 169 is identical to the one organized by Antiochus IV at Daphne near Antioch, and that consequently the date of the festival should be fixed to 169. If this last conclusion

  7. Judaism - Hellenistic, 4th-2nd Century: Contact between Greeks and Semites goes back to Minoan and Mycenaean times and is reflected in certain terms used by Homer and other early Greek authors. It is not until the end of the 4th century, however, that Jews are first mentioned by Greek writers, who praise them as brave, self-disciplined, and philosophical. After being conquered by Alexander the ...

  8. Antiochus IV Epiphanes (c. 215 BC – November/December 164 BC) was a Greek Hellenistic king who ruled the Seleucid Empire from 175 BC until his death in 164 BC. He was a son of King Antiochus III the Great.

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