How To Use Saragossa In A Sentence

  • The same thing is happening with other foreign place names – Saragossa is now usually Zaragoza, and Corunna has become La Coruña. Loss of anglicizations | Linguism
  • The Saragossa starch factory in Spain will have its product portfolio increased, in replacement of isoglucose production. Food IngredientsFIrst News
  • Fantasy on the other hand is as old as humanity (Homer is fantasy by any definition you care) and epics are also as old as humanity, so it's a different story there and no wonder there is a lot of old enjoyable fantasy out there, maybe not about elves, but fantasy nonetheless (check Arabian Nights, Melmoth the Wanderer, Manuscript Found in Saragossa - just to give some books that I still enjoy and are several hundred or more years old). Does Science Fiction, in Fact, Suck?
  • Authorities at the rail station in Zaragoza - also called Saragossa - found that the keys for the car, which has a customised number plate reading "P33NNT", were left on the passenger seat. NEWS.com.au | Top Stories
  • The Countess of Aranda arrived then in Saragossa, and was extremely well received by the king and the whole court. The Heptameron of Margaret, Queen of Navarre
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  • Nevertheless, in the autumn of 1469 Ferdinand rode across the Saragossan mountains to Valladolid to claim Isabelia as bride.
  • With the fall of the caliphate in the early 11th century, power shifted to provincial centres and alcazars were built for local rulers, notably the Aljafería of Saragossa which dates from the 11th century.
  • It was also invited to attend the Innovate Europe conference in Saragossa, Spain. Tiny Projector Enters the Big Show | Impact Lab
  • Islamic influences could have been provided by Mudejar communities in Huesca, Saragossa, or Valencia, or by trade connections between Catalan Jews and the Maghreb.
  • In the previous two chapters, we began to see the Church hierarchy in Saragossa defining the communities in different terms. Like Wheat to the Miller: Community, Convivencia, and the Construction of Morisco Identity in Sixteenth-Century Aragon
  • Alfonso, hearing the news, at once raised the siege of Saragossa and began to assemble his own forces.
  • He sent waggon-loads of treasure and a great entourage of knights to Saragossa with requests for a formal reconciliation.
  • For in opening their lives to the entire expanse of Greco-Arabic and Hebrew learning, the dictionally pure Jewish poets of Cordoba, Granada, and Saragossa carried out an act of profound, if paradoxical, cultural redemption. The Lost Jewish Culture
  • Nevertheless, in the autumn of 1469 Ferdinand rode across the Saragossan mountains to Valladolid to claim Isabelia as bride.
  • The Archbiship and the Church in Saragossa: Chapter 8 Like Wheat to the Miller: Community, Convivencia, and the Construction of Morisco Identity in Sixteenth-Century Aragon
  • Rodrigo and Motamid rapidly began to make inroads into the border territory separating the Caliphates of Saragossa and Lerida.
  • The others followed, and still as Rodriguez went that famous name Saragossa echoed within his mind. Don Rodriguez; chronicles of Shadow Valley
  • I am now better, and hope in a few days to be able to proceed to Saragossa, which is the only road open. Letters of George Borrow to the British and Foreign Bible Society
  • Talavera de la Reina, Sierra Morena, Saragossa, Montmiraill, Champaubert, and Montéreau; he was present, also, at the too deplorable day of Waterloo; he was then ensign-bearer of his regiment. Naufrage de la frigate la Méduse. English
  • I was, however, startled to find that such business forms, printed in Saragossa, were being used in the Jiloca region by the early 1600s. Like Wheat to the Miller: Community, Convivencia, and the Construction of Morisco Identity in Sixteenth-Century Aragon
  • He left his son to rule over Saragossa.
  • In the music, a complex web of ricercars, or intricate contrapuntal studies, seems to reflect the labyrinth of Saragossa's subterranean corridors through which the prisoner stumbles.
  • Going one day, according to her custom, to pay her court to the king, who was then in Saragossa, she passed through a village belonging to the Viceroy of Catalonia, who did not quit the frontiers of Perpignan, on account of the wars between the Kings of France and Spain. The Heptameron of Margaret, Queen of Navarre
  • Now let your worships turn your eyes to that tower that appears there, which is supposed to be one of the towers of the alcazar of Saragossa, now called the now called the Aljaferia; that lady who appears on that balcony dressed in Moorish fashion is the peerless Melisendra, for many a time she used to gaze from thence upon the road to France, and seek consolation in her captivity by thinking of Paris and her husband. Don Quixote

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