How To Use Christian era In A Sentence
- The medieval lack of historic sense gives to all the plays the setting of the authors 'own times; Roman officers appear as feudal knights; and all the heathens (including the Jews) are Saracens, worshippers of' Mahound 'and' Termagaunt '; while the good characters, however long they may really have lived before the Christian era, swear stoutly by St. John and St. Paul and the other medieval Christian divinities. A History of English Literature
- Takshac, the Huna and the Chaura, were considered by Colonel Tod to be the representatives of the Huns or Scythians, that is, the nomad invading tribes from Central Asia, whose principal incursions took place during the first five centuries of the Christian era. The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India - Volume IV of IV Kumhar-Yemkala
- It will probably be news to most readers that alfalfa -- the wonderful forage crop of the West, the producer of more gold than all the mines of the Klondike -- was in use so long ago, for the impression is pretty general that it is comparatively new; the fact is that it is older than the Christian era and that the name alfalfa comes from the Arabic and means "the best crop. George Washington: Farmer
- The Christian era starts with the birth of Christ.
- The Christian era starts with the birth of Christ.
- The Christian era starts with the birth of Christ.
- At the beginning of the first millennium of the Christian era, synagogues were all-purpose buildings for assembly in village and town.
- Zosimus, sir, Zosimus of Panopolis, was a learned Greek, who flourished at Alexandria in the third century of the Christian era, and wrote treatises on the spagyric art. The Queen Pedauque
- Until the Roman Christian era the term Satan had no sinister connotation whatsoever, and in biblical times, members of a political opposition party would have customarily been called “satans” [sonus] understanding issues: part 7
- The indiction was a cycle of fifteen years, the first of these cycles being conceived to have started at a point three years before the beginning of the present Christian Era. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery