- The
March of
Tuscany (Latin:
Marchiae Tusciae;
Modern Italian:
Marca di
Tuscia [ˈmarka di ˈtuʃʃa]) was a
march of the
Kingdom of
Italy and the Holy Roman...
- Gregorovius, p. 96.
Monaldo Leopardi (1824).
Series Rectorum Anconitanae Marchiae Quam
Collexit Monaldus Leopardus Recanatensis (in Latin). Recaneti: J....
-
betrothal in 1225 of "filiam
Comitis Sanctis Ægidii" and "filium
Comitis Marchiæ".
Chronicon Turonense,
Recueil des
historiens des
Gaules et de la France...
-
PRINCIPI AC DOMINO,
DOMINO WILHELMO DUCI JULIAE,
CLIVORUM ET MONTIS,
COMITI MARCHIAE ET RAVENSBURGI,
DOMINO IN
RAVENSTEIN opus hoc
felicibus ejus au****iis...
-
following castles are ****umed to have been
seats of
frontier counties (
marchiae, határispánságok), it is
probable that
other castles were such
seats as...
-
distinguish it from Cologne,
toponym extensions were
often applied, for
example Marchiae ("of the
March [Brandenburg]"), or ad Spream, ad
Spreeam or ad Spreham...
-
collaboration came in 1154, when Pope
Anastasius IV
raised the doge
dominator Marchiæ (lit. "ruler of Marche"). Morosini's
reconciliation with the
Church had...
- (1000/01–1038).
Initially there were also
several small frontier counties (Latin:
marchiae),
established for
military purposes only (e. g.
comitatus of Bolondus)...
-
Lusatia Macedonia[6]
Macedonia Magnesia[7]
Magnesia Prefecture,
Greece Marchiæ Marche (reg.),
Italy Masovia,
Mazovia Masovia (Mazowsze), prov. of Poland...
-
Among the
surviving works are the
pamphlets De
titulo Edwardi comitis Marchiæ (The
Title of Edward, Earl of March), Of the
Title of the
House of York...