-
Milites were the
trained regular footsoldiers of
ancient Rome, and
later a term used to
describe "soldiers" in
Medieval Europe.
These men were the non-specialist...
-
Milites Templi (Latin for "Soldiers of the Temple") was a
papal bull
issued by Pope
Celestine II in 1144. It
ordered the
clergy to
protect the Knights...
- The Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier (Italian:
Tomba del
Milite Ignoto) is a war
memorial located in Rome
under the
statue of the
goddess Roma at the Altare...
- the Crown, and
Criminal Causes. The
Fourth Edition. Aut**** Edw. Coke,
Milite (4th ed.), London:
Printed for A[ndrew] Crooke, W[illiam] Leake, A[bel]...
-
Testament from the
Latin Vulgate. The
plural of
Latin miles (soldier) is
milites or the
collective militia. By the 5th century, the
Church had
started to...
-
provincial relative to the
Christian po****tion, or
because they were not
milites Christi (soldiers of Christ).
Alternative terms used in
Christian texts...
- Berresford,
Italian Memorial Sculpture, 1820–1940: A
Legacy of Love56.
MILITE IGNOTO entry (in Italian) in the
Enciclopedia Treccani "Il
Vittoriano e...
- The name of the
knights and
order varied over the centuries,
including Milites Sancti Sepulcri and The
Sacred and
Military Order of the Holy Sepulchre...
-
better armoured than
their Muslim counterparts, with
noble and non-noble
milites and
cavallers wearing mail hauberks,
separate mail
coifs and
metal helmets...
-
society as well. From the late 10th
century onwards heavily armed hor****,
milites or knights,
emerged as an
expensive elite taking centre stage both on and...