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Deutsche Latifundium Synonyme

Besitztum  ÂGrundbesitz  ÂLatifundium  
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Englische latifundium Synonyme

Latifundium Definition

Empire
(n.) Supreme power
Empire
(n.) The dominion of an emperor
Empire
(n.) Any dominion
Estate
(n.) Settled condition or form of existence
Estate
(n.) Social standing or rank
Estate
(n.) A person of high rank.
Estate
(n.) A property which a person possesses
Estate
(n.) The state
Estate
(n.) The great classes or orders of a community or state (as the clergy, the nobility, and the commonalty of England) or their representatives who administer the government
Estate
(n.) The degree, quality, nature, and extent of one's interest in, or ownership of, lands, tenements, etc.
Estate
(v. t.) To establish.
Estate
(v. t.) Tom settle as a fortune.
Estate
(v. t.) To endow with an estate.
Greco-Roman
(a.) Having characteristics that are partly Greek and partly Roman
Landed
(imp. & p. p.) of Land
Landed
(a.) Having an estate in land.
Landed
(a.) Consisting in real estate or land
Roman
(a.) Of or pertaining to Rome, or the Roman people
Roman
(a.) Of or pertaining to the Roman Catholic religion
Roman
(a.) Upright
Roman
(a.) Expressed in letters, not in figures, as I., IV., i., iv., etc.
Roman
(n.) A native, or permanent resident, of Rome
Roman
(n.) Roman type, letters, or print, collectively
Worked
(imp. & p. p.) of Work

latifundium (landed estate worked by slaves in the Roman Empire) Bedeutung

Greco-Roman wrestling a style of wrestling where the wrestlers are forbidden to tackle or trip or use holds below the waist
real-estate business the business of selling real estate
basilica Roman basilica a Roman building used for public administration
beach wagon
station wagon
wagon estate car
beach waggon
station waggon
waggon
a car that has a long body and rear door with space behind rear seat
clerical collar
Roman collar
dog collar
a stiff white collar with no opening in the front, a distinctive symbol of the clergy
Empire State Building a skyscraper built in New York City in ,feet tall
Roman arch
semicircular arch
a round arch drawn from a single center
Roman building a building constructed by the ancient Romans
Roman candle a cylindrical firework that projects a series of colored balls of fire
Roman nose
hooknose
a nose with a prominent slightly aquiline bridge
classical architecture
Greco-Roman architecture
architecture influenced by the ancient Greeks or Romans
Roman architecture the architecture of ancient Rome
Romanism
Roman Catholicism
papism
the beliefs and practices of the Catholic Church based in Rome
roman a clef a novel in which actual persons and events are disguised as fictional characters
roman fleuve a French novel in the form of a long chronicle of a family or other social group
Roman alphabet
Latin alphabet
the alphabet evolved by the ancient Romans which serves for writing most of the languages of western Europe
Roman law
Justinian code
civil law jus civile
the legal code of ancient Rome, codified under Justinian, the basis for many modern systems of civil law
Roman numeral a symbol in the old Roman notation, I,V,X,L,C,D,M represent ,,,,,, respectively in Arabic notation
roman roman type
roman letters
roman print
a typeface used in ancient Roman inscriptions
Empire an eating apple that somewhat resembles a McIntosh, used as both an eating and a cooking apple
Roman mythology the mythology of the ancient Romans
empire a group of countries under a single authority, the British created a great empire
conglomerate
empire
a group of diverse companies under common ownership and run as a single organization
publishing conglomerate
publishing empire
a conglomerate of publishing companies
Real Estate Investment Trust
REIT
an investment trust that owns and manages a pool of commercial properties and mortgages and other real estate assets, shares can be bought and sold in the stock market
Roman Catholic
Western Church
Roman Catholic Church
Church of Rome
Roman Church
the Christian Church based in the Vatican and presided over by a pope and an episcopal hierarchy
estate of the realm
estate
the three estates
a major social class or order of persons regarded collectively as part of the body politic of the country (especially in the United Kingdom) and formerly possessing distinct political rights
first estate
Lords Spiritual
the clergy in France and the heads of the church in Britain
second estate
Lords Temporal
the nobility in France and the peerage in Britain
third estate
Commons
the common people
fourth estate the press, including journalists, newspaper writers, photographers
Holy Roman Empire a political entity in Europe that began with the papal coronation of Otto I as the first emperor in and lasted untilwhen it was dissolved by Napoleon
Hohenzollern empire
Second Reich
the Reich when Hohenzollern monarchs ruled Germany (from to )
Roman Legion a division of from to men (including cavalry) in the Roman army
Roman Inquisition
Congregation of the Inquisition
an inquisition set up in Italy in to curb the number of Protestants, it was the Roman Inquisition that put Galileo on trial
landed gentry
squirearchy
the gentry who own land (considered as a class)
empire a monarchy with an emperor as head of state
Mogul empire an empire established by the Mogul conquerors of India that reigned from to
Second Empire the imperial government of Napoleon III in France from -
housing estate a residential area where the houses were all planned and built at the same time
empire
imperium
the domain ruled by an emperor or empress, the region over which imperial dominion is exercised
Roman Republic the ancient Roman state fromBC until Augustus assumed power in BC, was governed by an elected Senate but dissatisfaction with the Senate led to civil wars that culminated in a brief dictatorship by Julius Caesar
Roman Empire an empire established by Augustus in BC and divided in AD into the Western Roman Empire and the eastern or Byzantine Empire, at its peak lands in Europe and Africa and Asia were ruled by ancient Rome
Byzantine Empire
Byzantium Eastern Roman Empire
a continuation of the Roman Empire in the Middle East after its division in
Western Roman Empire
Western Empire
the western part after the Roman Empire was divided in , it lasted only until
British Empire a former empire consisting of Great Britain and all the territories under its control, reached its greatest extent at the end of World War I, it included the British Isles, British West Indies, Canada, British Guiana, British West Africa, British East Africa, India, Australia, New Zealand, the sun never sets on the British Empire
Egyptian Empire
Egypt
an ancient empire to the west of Israel, centered on the Nile River and ruled by a Pharaoh, figured in many events described in the Old Testament
Persia Persian Empire an empire in southern Asia created by Cyrus the Great in the th century BC and destroyed by Alexander the Great in the th century BC
Ottoman Empire
Turkish Empire
a Turkish sultanate of southwestern Asia and northeastern Africa and southeastern Europe, created by the Ottoman Turks in the th century and lasted until the end of World War I, although initially small it expanded until it superseded the Byzantine Empire
Georgia
Empire State of the South
Peach State
GA
a state in southeastern United States, one of the Confederate states during the American Civil War
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Als Latifundium wurde im Römischen Reich ein ausgedehntes Landgut oder Großgrundbesitz bezeichnet, dessen Größe 500 iugera [2] überstieg.