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Shaking his head as if to one of slow wits, the Thracian said, 'Go and see him.
Spartacus was the Thracian who led a slave uprising against Roman slavery.
The first Thracian who finds this amusing will have his skull crushed and his balls ripped off.
The Thracian could then lurch the sword upward into the jaw and through the face, killing the opponent instantaneously.
Plutarch describes him as "a Thracian of Nomadic stock".
The belief that Thracian was close to Phrygian is no longer popular and has mostly been discarded.
Thracian was placed on duty as Patrol boat No.101 in October 1942.
This objection may not be relevant, if Thracian was a separate language to Dacian.
Alternatively, Thracian was a southern dialect of Dacian which developed relatively late.
It looked Mediterranean, possibly Greece or the Thracian Islands.
Thracian may refer to:
Viewed in that light, the Thracian could not kill Tigellinus, because that bit of corruption had a few more jobs to do.
The Thracian is shipped to Capua in Italy, a center of gladiator training.
He was a Thracian who was not a Thracian.
HMS Thracian was also in port and was captured by the Japanese Army.
One suggestion is that the Dacian differentiation from Thracian may have taken place after 1500 BC.
He heard the slip of wool on rock and a scuff of boots on the wall of the tunnel and the Thracian was gone.
When it was reported that a blind man had been restored to sight at the touch of its waters, Leo the Thracian erected a church over the spring.
They landed in a large bay once called the Thracian Sea, which is now labeled on present-day maps simply as the Wash in Cambridgeshire.
HMS Thracian was an Admiralty S class destroyer of the Royal Navy.
'Gods, Valerius . . .' The Thracian had forgotten his pain.
It is understood that the Thracian had sent all others from the building on a pretext before he tried to save the boy, so the truth will never be exactly known.
Mining industry including lead, zinc and marble especially in the Panagia area where one of the mountains near the Thracian Sea has a large marble quarry.
The ancient historian and biographer Plutarch describes Spartacus as "a Thracian of nomadic stock", referring to the Maedi.
In the year 457, Leo I the Thracian succeeded Marcian and became the first emperor to be crowned by the Patriarch of Constantinople.