han soyu

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Türkçe - İngilizce
dynasty
{n} sovereignty, government
family of the ruling class In ancient Egyptian times the dynasties were the Pharaoh and his family
A dynasty is a period of time during which a country is ruled by members of the same family. carvings dating back to the Ming dynasty
A dynasty is a series of rulers of a country who all belong to the same family. The Seljuk dynasty of Syria was founded in 1094
a series of rulers descending within a family; following the Ptolemaic historian Manetho, ancient Egyptian history is divided into thirty dynasties
A series of rulers or dynasts from one family
{i} succession of rulers from the same family, rule of such a family
a sequence of powerful leaders in the same family
Sovereignty; lordship; dominion
A ruling family who remains in power for generations by choosing successors from among blood relatives Examples include the rulers of both the ancient Chinese and Egyptian civilizations
A succession of kings who were usually related Egyptologists usually divide ancient Egypt's history into 31 dynasties up to the arrival of Alexander the Great The system was initially devised by the priest Manetho in the third century BC
A dynasty is a family which has members from two or more generations who are important in a particular field of activity, for example in business or politics
a powerful group or family
One of the most prosperous periods in Chinese history (618 A D -907 A D )
A race or succession of kings, of the same line or family; the continued lordship of a race of rulers
a series of rulers from the same family
a line of related kings; 31 roughly successive dynasties were defined by the priest-historian Manetho in the third century BC based on earlier Egyptian traditions
Original form means a group of rulers of the same lineage, but in Egypt dynasties mean only historic relations Sometimes rulers of same family are sorted into different dynasties like Huni and Sneferu In the other hand, some kings of different families are in the same dynasty (like in the hyksos era), according to their political, economical and historical role
A dynasty often represents a family line of rulers in the usual sense of the word Often, however, it represents a convenient and logical division of the time-span of a region Thus for example, Israel's history is commonly divided into blocks of time corresponding to the most significant social and structural changes recorded in the Bible For example, one can reasonably speak of the patriarchal time (which was based on a family line) but also the Northern Kingdom of Israel (which consisted of several families over its span) The break between dynastic periods can therefore be when one family usurps another, but also when one convenient logical grouping gives way to another
han soyu