marcus

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a. Rudolph marcus
İngilizce - İngilizce
A male given name, latinate form of Mark

Aristarchus my fellowprisoner saluteth you, and Marcus, sister's son to Barnabas, (touching whom ye received commandments; if he come unto you, receive him;).

latinate form of Mark
Marcus Valerius Martialis Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maximianus Marcus Cocceius Nerva Marcus Fabius Quintilianus Marcus Vitruvius Pollio Agrippa Marcus Vipsanius Marcus Antonius Brutus Marcus Junius Camillus Marcus Furius Cato Marcus Porcius Cicero Marcus Tullius Connelly Marcus Cook Crassus Marcus Licinius Garvey Marcus Moziah Marcus Alonzo Hanna Marcus Julius Agrippa Lepidus Marcus Aemilius Marcellus Marcus Claudius Marcus Rudolph A. Neiman Marcus Marcus Rothkowitz Varro Marcus Terentius Whitman Marcus Marcus Aurelius Severus Antoninus Augustus Caesar Marcus Aurelius Commodus Antoninus Augustus Caesar Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus Marcus Aurelius Marcus Annius Verus Marcus Aurelius Severus Alexander Marcus Ulpius Traianus
{i} male first name; family name
Marcus Bains line
A line drawn in an appointment book representing the current time of day
Marcus Bains lines
plural form of Marcus Bains line
Marcus Aemilius Lepidus
died 13/12 BC Roman consul (46, 42 BC) and triumvir (43-36). After the death of Julius Caesar, Lepidus controlled parts of Gaul, Spain, and Africa and wielded great influence. He and Mark Antony opposed the republican conspirators and in 43 formed the Second Triumvirate with Octavian (later Augustus). He acquired a second Spanish province but lost Spain and Gaul to Antony and Octavian, keeping only Africa. After helping defeat Sextus Pompeius (36), he challenged Octavian, but his soldiers defected and he was forced to retire
Marcus Aurelius
(c. AD 121-180) Roman emperor, author of the philosophical work "The Meditations
Marcus Aurelius
in full Caesar Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus orig. Marcus Annius Verus born April 26, AD 121, Rome died March 17, 180, Vindobona [Vienna] or Sirmium, Pannonia Roman emperor (161-180). He was born into a wealthy and prominent family. Hadrian arranged that Marcus and Lucius Verus be adopted by the designated future emperor Antoninus Pius, who dutifully groomed Marcus as his heir. On his accession, Marcus nevertheless shared power with his adoptive brother as coemperor, though he himself remained the more dominant. His reign was marked by numerous military crises, all the major frontiers being threatened by invasion. Struggles against the Parthians (162-166) were successful, but returning troops brought a devastating plague to Rome. With a concurrent German invasion, Roman morale declined; the Germans were repulsed, but Verus died during the campaign (169). Marcus made his son Commodus coemperor in 177. Though a man of gentle character and wide learning, Marcus opposed Christianity and supported persecution of its adherents. His Meditations on Stoicism, considered one of the great books of all times, gives a full picture of his religious and moral values. His reign is often thought to mark the Golden Age of Rome
Marcus Baker
A peak, 4,018.7 m (13,176 ft) high, in the Chugach Mountains of southeast Alaska. It is the highest elevation in the range
Marcus Brutus
a Roman politician who was the chief member of the plot to murder Julius Caesar (?85-42 BC)
Marcus Claudius Marcellus
born 42 died 23 BC, Baiae, Campania [Italy] Roman leader. Nephew of Augustus (he was the son of Augustus's sister Octavia), Marcellus was Augustus's presumed heir. He married Augustus's daughter Julia in 25 BC and later that year served with Augustus in Spain. Great hopes had rested with him, and his unexpected death led to problems of succession. born 268 died 208 BC, near Venusia, Apulia Roman general. Elected consul in 222, he fought in Gaul and won the spolia opima ("spoils of honour"), awarded for killing an enemy chief in single combat, for the third and last time in Roman history. He was consul again in 215 and 214. Serving in Sicily (214-211) in the Second Punic War, he took Syracuse after a two-year siege; his troops sacked the city and carried its art treasures to Rome. He served again as consul in 210 and 208. While fighting Hannibal near Venusia, he was caught in an ambush and killed
Marcus Cook Connelly
born Dec. 13, 1890, McKeesport, Pa., U.S. died Dec. 21, 1980, New York, N.Y. U.S. playwright, screenwriter, and director. He covered theatrical news as a journalist in Pittsburgh and New York City. He collaborated with George S. Kaufman on the play Dulcy (1921), which they followed with the comedies To the Ladies (1922) and Beggar on Horseback (1924) and the librettos for the musicals Helen of Troy, New York (1923) and Be Yourself (1924). Connelly went on to write Green Pastures (1930, Pulitzer Prize; film, 1936), his best-known work, and The Farmer Takes a Wife (1934; film, 1935)
Marcus Furius Camillus
died 365 BC Roman soldier and statesman. He allegedly defeated the Gauls after their sack of Rome ( 390), for which he was honoured as the city's second founder. Awarded four triumphs and made dictator five times, he enjoyed his greatest victory in 396, over the Etruscans at Veii. Though a patrician, he adopted reforms beneficial to the army and the plebeians (367)
Marcus Garvey
born Aug. 17, 1887, St. Ann's Bay, Jam. died June 10, 1940, London, Eng. Jamaican-born U.S. black-nationalist leader. In 1914 he founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association; after moving to the U.S. in 1916, he established branches in New York's Harlem and other black neighbourhoods in the North. By 1919 the rising "Black Moses" claimed a following of about two million, to whom he spoke of a "new Negro," proud of being black. His newspaper, Negro World (1919-33), advocated an independent black economy within the framework of white capitalism, and he established black-run businesses, including the Black Star shipping line. In 1920 he convened an international convention to unify blacks and encourage trade between Africa and the U.S. His influence declined rapidly when he was indicted in 1922 for mail fraud. After he had served two years in prison, his sentence was commuted and he was deported (1927). His movement, the first important black-nationalist movement in the U.S., soon died out
Marcus Garvey
{i} (1887-1940) United States black nationalist and leader, founder of the Universal Negro Improvement Association
Marcus Junius Brutus
or Quintus Caepio Brutus born 85 died 42 BC, near Philippi, Macedonia Roman politician, leader of the conspirators who assassinated Julius Caesar in 44 BC. He joined Pompey's army against Caesar in the civil war (49) but was pardoned by Caesar after Pompey's death. He joined the plot to murder Caesar out of his desire to restore the Roman republic. After Caesar's death, he and Gaius Cassius formed an army in Macedonia; Brutus defeated the Caesarians under Octavian (Augustus) in the first engagement of the Battle of Philippi, but Mark Antony and Octavian crushed his army in a second encounter. Realizing the republican cause was lost, Brutus committed suicide
Marcus Licinius Crassus
born 115 died 53 BC Roman financier and politician. He sided with Lucius Cornelius Sulla against Gaius Marius in the civil war of 83-82 BC and came into conflict with Pompey the Great. In 72-71 he put down the slave rebellion led by Spartacus. He made loans to indebted senators, including Julius Caesar. In 70 Crassus and Pompey were elected co-consuls. Ten years later Crassus, Caesar, and Pompey formed the First Triumvirate (see triumvirate). As governor of Syria (54) Crassus invaded Parthia; his death at the Battle of Carrhae led to civil war between Caesar and Pompey
Marcus Moziah Garvey
born Aug. 17, 1887, St. Ann's Bay, Jam. died June 10, 1940, London, Eng. Jamaican-born U.S. black-nationalist leader. In 1914 he founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association; after moving to the U.S. in 1916, he established branches in New York's Harlem and other black neighbourhoods in the North. By 1919 the rising "Black Moses" claimed a following of about two million, to whom he spoke of a "new Negro," proud of being black. His newspaper, Negro World (1919-33), advocated an independent black economy within the framework of white capitalism, and he established black-run businesses, including the Black Star shipping line. In 1920 he convened an international convention to unify blacks and encourage trade between Africa and the U.S. His influence declined rapidly when he was indicted in 1922 for mail fraud. After he had served two years in prison, his sentence was commuted and he was deported (1927). His movement, the first important black-nationalist movement in the U.S., soon died out
Marcus Porcius Cato
known as Cato the Censor or Cato the Elder born 234, Tusculum, Latium died 149 BC Roman statesman and orator, the first important Latin prose writer. Born of plebeian stock, he fought in the Second Punic War. His oratorical skills paved the way for his political career. He held conservative anti-Hellenic views and opposed the pro-Hellenic Scipio family, whose power he broke. Elected censor (magistrate in charge of censuses, taxes, and the public good) in 184, he tried to restore the mos majorum ("ancestral custom") and combat Greek influence, which he believed undermined Roman morality. He crafted laws against luxury and the financial freedom of women and never ceased to demand the destruction of Carthage. His writings include works on history, medicine, law, military science, and agriculture. His great-grandson Cato the Younger (b. 95 d. 46 BC) was a leading Optimate (see Optimates and Populares) who sought to preserve the republic against Julius Caesar
Marcus Porcius Cato
{i} Cato the Elder, Cato the Censor (234 B.C-149 B.C.), Roman statesman and reputed soldier, writer who wrote the first history of Rome
Marcus Porcius Cato Uticencis
{i} Cato the Younger (95 B.C.- 46 B.C.), statesman in the late Roman Republic, great-grandson of Cato the Elder
Marcus Terentius Varro
v. born 116, probably Reate [Italy] died 27 BC Roman scholar and satirist. Varro was active in public life, rising to the office of praetor. He sided with Pompey the Great but later reconciled with Julius Caesar. A prolific writer, he sought in his writings to inculcate moral virtues and to link Rome's future with its glorious past. He is best known for his Saturae Menippeae ("Menippean Satires"), medleys in mixed prose and verse that mock the absurdities of modern times. He wrote some 75 works in more than 600 books on a wide range of subjects jurisprudence, astronomy, geography, education, and literary history as well as in a variety of genres satires, poems, orations, and letters
Marcus Tullius Cicero
and one of the greatest Latin writers (106-43 BC) a Roman politician who was a famous orator (=someone who is good at making speeches). born 106 BC, Arpinum, Latium died Dec. 7, 43 BC, Formiae Roman statesman, lawyer, scholar, and writer. Born to a wealthy family, he quickly established a brilliant career in law and plunged into politics, then rife with factionalism and conspiracy. Cicero was elected consul in 63 BC. Of his speeches, perhaps the best known are those he made against Catiline, whose uprising he foiled. He vainly tried to uphold republican principles in the civil wars that destroyed the Roman Republic. After the death of Julius Caesar, he delivered his 14 Philippic orations against Mark Antony. When the triumvirate of Antony, Octavian (later Augustus), and Marcus Lepidus was formed, he was executed. His extant works include 58 orations and more than 900 letters, as well as many poems, philosophical and political treatises, and books of rhetoric. He is remembered as the greatest Roman orator and the innovator of what became known as Ciceronian rhetoric, which remained the foremost rhetorical model for many centuries
Marcus Tullius Cicero
{i} Cicero (106-43 BC), Roman statesman and writer
Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa
He went on to quell rebellions, found colonies, administer parts of the empire, and give to Rome funds for public works and buildings. In 23 Augustus seemed to make him heir, and Agrippa married Augustus's daughter, Julia. His administrative and military skills were particularly directed to the eastern empire, where in 15 he met with and made an ally of Herod of Judaea. Agrippa's writings (now lost) influenced Strabo and Pliny the Elder. His daughter Agrippina the Elder (14? BC-AD 33) was the wife of Germanicus Caesar, mother of Caligula and Agrippina the Younger, and grandmother of Nero
Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa
born 63 BC? died March, 12 BC , Campania Powerful deputy of Augustus. He helped Octavian (later Augustus) take power after Julius Caesar's murder (44 BC), defeating Sextus Pompeius in 36 and Mark Antony at the Battle of Actium in
Marcus Whitman
born Sept. 4, 1802, Rushville, N.Y., U.S. died Nov. 29, 1847, Waiilatpu, Oregon Territory U.S. missionary and pioneer. A physician and Congregational missionary, he was sent to the Oregon region after offering his services to the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. In 1836 he and his wife founded a mission among the Cayuse Indians near present-day Walla Walla, Wash. He helped the Indians build houses and a corn-grinding mill, and his wife opened a mission school. In 1842 he traveled east to encourage settlement of the Oregon country. On his return he joined a caravan of 1,000 immigrants to the Columbia River valley. He cared for Indian children in an 1847 measles epidemic, but he was accused of sorcery when many died while white children survived. The Indians attacked the whites and massacred 14, including the Whitmans. Their deaths led Congress to organize the Oregon Territory in 1848
Neiman Marcus
Prestigious U.S. department-store chain. It was founded in Dallas, Texas, in 1907 by Herbert Marcus, his sister Carrie Marcus Neiman, and her husband, A.L. Neiman. From the beginning it featured unusual merchandise, particularly extravagant and outlandish gifts (including camels and Chinese junks) intended to appeal to the rich, in addition to a more standard selection for moderate-income customers. In 1999 Neiman Marcus Group, which included Neiman Marcus and the retailer Bergdorf Goodman, became a publicly held company
Nieman Marcus
American chain of luxury department stores
Rudolph A. Marcus
born July 21, 1923, Montreal, Que., Can. Canadian-born U.S. chemist. Educated at McGill University, he worked at the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn (from 1951), the University of Illinois (from 1964), and the California Institute of Technology (from 1978). He studied electron transfer in redox reactions in the 1950s and '60s, finding that subtle changes in the molecular structures of the reactants and the solvent molecules around them influence the ability of electrons to move between the molecules. He also discovered the parabolic relationship between the driving force of an electron-transfer reaction and the reaction's rate. His work, which has shed light on fundamental phenomena such as photosynthesis, cell metabolism, and simple corrosion, won him a 1992 Nobel Prize
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