Examples of using Marcellinus in English and their translations into Russian
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Marcellinus, Chronicon.
Antonine Itinerary Ammianus Marcellinus.
Ammianus Marcellinus, Roman History.
Hortarius is mentioned by the Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus.
Ammianus Marcellinus, History, 15.2.3.
The story is told differently by the two sources survived, Ammianus Marcellinus and Zosimus.
Contemporary historian Ammianus Marcellinus estimated that two-thirds of the Roman army were lost in the battle.
On 25 March 467, Leo I, with the consent of Ricimer,designated Anthemius Western Emperor as Caesar and sent him to Italy with an army led by the Magister militum per Illyricum Marcellinus.
Ammianus Marcellinus and Procopius also noted their use as ambassadors on several occasions.
Within forty years, Donatists began spreading rumors that Marcellinus had been a traditor, and that he had even sacrificed to the pagan gods.
Marcellinus is not mentioned in the Martyrologium hieronymianum, or in the Depositio episcoporum, or in the Depositio martyrum.
In 468, Leo the Thracian,Anthemius and Marcellinus organised a major operation against the Vandal kingdom in Africa.
Marcellinus Comes shortly recorded"The head of Dinzic, son of Attila, king of the Huns, was brought to Constantinople.
While he was prefect, he was sent as an envoyby the usurper Magnentius, who had ousted Constans, to Constantius II, along with Marcellinus, Maximus and Nunechius.
Marcellinus' pontificate began at a time when Diocletian was Roman Emperor, but had not yet started to persecute the Christians.
In the beginning of the 5th century, Petilianus, the Donatist bishop of Cirta,says that Marcellinus and his priests had given up the holy books to the pagans during the persecution and offered incense to false gods.
Marcellinus was mentioned in the General Roman Calendar, into which a feast day in his honour jointly with that of Saint Cletus on 26 April was inserted in the thirteenth century.
See David Hunt's handling of Drinkwater's argument in"The Outsider Inside: Ammianus on the Rebellion of Silvanus" in Jan Willem Drijvers and David Hunt, eds., The Late Roman World and its Historian:Interpreting Ammianus Marcellinus London, 1999.
Publius Cornelius Lentulus Marcellinus, the son of Marcus Claudius Marcellus, he was adopted by one of the Cornelii Lentuli.
Marcellinus seems to have died on October 25, 304, and(if he had apostatized) was probably expelled from the church in early 303, but his successor, Marcellus, was not consecrated until either November or December 306.
The Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus described in detail the tsunami that hit Alexandria and other places in the early hours of 21 July 365.
Ammianus Marcellinus teaches that ancient divinations were always accomplished with the help of the Spirits of the Elements(Spiritus Elementorum, and in Greek pnevmata t^n stoicejwn).636.
Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus(4th Century AD) noted in his work History that"Midian Oil"(called"Nafta" in the local language) was used in ancient Azerbaijan.
Ammianus Marcellinus states that the ancient divinations were always 236 accomplished with the help of the"spirits" of the elements(spiritus elementorum), or as they are called in Greek pnevmata t^n stoicejwn.
According to the Liber Pontificalis, Marcellinus was buried on 26 April 304 in the cemetery of Priscilla, on the Via Salaria, 25 days after his martyrdom; the Liberian Catalogue gives as the date 25 October.
The historian Ammianus Marcellinus described it as a barbarica conspiratio that capitalized on a depleted military force in the province brought about by Magnentius' losses at the Battle of Mursa Major after his unsuccessful bid to become emperor.
The Liber Pontificalis, based on the lost Acts of St Marcellinus, relates that during Diocletian's persecution Marcellinus was called upon to sacrifice, and offered incense to idols, but that, repenting shortly afterwards, he confessed the faith of Christ and suffered martyrdom with several companions.
His writings come in for adverse criticism from Jerome, Ammianus Marcellinus, and also the anonymous author of the Historia Augusta, who nevertheless cites him directly at least 26 times(apparently in most cases quoting or summarizing passages from Marius's lost work) and probably uses him in many places elsewhere.