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  1. Nicholas II, Duke of Opava. Duke of Opava and Duke of Ratibor, Treasurer of the Kingdom of Bohemia and Governor of Kladsko. Upload media. Wikipedia. Name in native language. Mikuláš II Opavský. Date of birth. 1288. Date of death.

  2. The Church of Hagia Euphemia at the Hippodrome was a Byzantine church in Constantinople. It was original the Palace of Antiochus, where the influential Persian eunuch Antiochus once lived. It was converted into a church and housed the relics of St. Euphemia in the 7th century. The church has a cycle of fourteen frescoes dating to the late 13th ...

  3. May 20, 2020 · Saint Euphemia lived in the 3rd century AD. She was the daughter of pious parents. Her father was a senator named Philophronos and her mother was Theodosia. She was born in Chalcedon, located across the Bosporus from the city of Byzantium (modern-day Istanbul). From her youth she dedicated her life to Christ and practiced the virtues of prayer ...

  4. Euphemia, also spelled Eufemia, is a feminine given name of Greek origin meaning "well spoken", from a combination of the Greek word elements eu , meaning "good", and phēmí, "to speak". Several early Christian saints were called Euphemia. The name was in vogue in the Anglosphere during the 1800s and has traditionally been particularly well ...

  5. Nicholas II, Duke of Opava. Nicholas II of Opava ( Czech Mikuláš II Opavský; * to 1288, † December 8, 1365) was 1318-1365 Duke of Opava and 1337-1365 Duke of Ratibor and Treasurer of the Kingdom of Bohemia. 1350 he held the office of Glatzer viscount. Life Nicholas II of Opava Opava came from a branch of the Bohemian Přemyslids.

  6. Brief Life History of Euphemia. When Euphemia Reideugh Of Tulliechettill was born in 1490, in Campsie, Stirlingshire, Scotland, her father, James Reidheuch, was 36 and her mother, Margaret Simpson, was 35. She married Walter Stewart 3rd Laird of Baldorran before 1510. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 1 daughter.

  7. The virgin is saved from the furnace of fire, hard stones be converted into powder, wild beasts be made meek and tame, and incline down their necks, and all manner of pains and torments by her orations and prayers be overcome. And at the last, smitten with a sword, she left the cloister of her flesh, and is joined to the celestial company, glad ...

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