- Empire.
Winning charioteers and team
owners could become extremely wealthy and powerful.
Charioteer or
Charioteers may also
refer to:
Charioteer of Delphi,...
- The
Charioteers were an
American gospel and pop
vocal group from 1930 to 1957. The
Charioteers were put
together in 1930 by
Professor Howard Daniel at...
- The
Charioteer is a
romantic war
novel by Mary
Renault (pseudonym for
Eileen Mary Challans)
first published in
London in 1953. Renault's US
publisher (Morrow)...
- turret.
Charioteer saw
limited use with the
British Army, but was used more
extensively by
overseas nations in
Europe and the
Middle East.
Charioteers saw...
- jockeys,
charioteers were
ideally slight of build, and
therefore often young, but
unlike jockeys, they were also tall. The
names of very few
charioteers are...
- The
Charioteer of Delphi, also
known as
Heniokhos (Gr****: Ἡνίοχος, the rein-holder), is a
statue surviving from
Ancient Greece, and an
example of ancient...
-
Motya Charioteer and the
Charioteer of Delphi. However,
Smith argues that this
difference reflects the
divergent status of the two
charioteers. Usually...
-
salutation of the
emperor and
victorious charioteer.
Porphyrius was one of the most po****r and
celebrated charioteers of his day, with a forty-year career...
-
found at Abusir.
Nakhtmin was
first charioteer of his majesty, also
master of the
horses and
overseer of the
charioteers. He was also
royal envoy to all foreign...
- enslaved,
later becoming a
charioteer in the
service of Elagabalus. Initially, he was a
lover and
student of
another charioteer named Gordius. Elagabalus...