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SPOLIA

  • Spolia
  • Repurposed building stone for new construction

    Spolia (Latin for 'spoils'; sing.: spolium) are stones taken from an old structure and repurposed for new construction or decorative purposes. It is the

    Spolia

    Spolia

    Spolia

  • Spolia opima
  • Highest war trophy for an Ancient Roman

    The spolia opima (Latin for 'rich spoils') were the armour, arms, and other effects that an ancient Roman general stripped from the body of an opposing

    Spolia opima

    Spolia_opima

  • Spolia (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Spolia (spoils) is a Latin word that occurs in the following contexts: Spolia, building rubble re-used Spoils of victory Spolia opima, armour and arms

    Spolia (disambiguation)

    Spolia_(disambiguation)

  • Marcus Claudius Marcellus
  • Roman general and politician (c. 270–208 BC)

    Marcellus gained the most prestigious award a Roman general could earn, the spolia opima, for killing the Gallic king Viridomarus in single combat in 222 BC

    Marcus Claudius Marcellus

    Marcus Claudius Marcellus

    Marcus_Claudius_Marcellus

  • Salmacida Spolia
  • Salmacida Spolia was the last masque performed at the English Court before the outbreak of the English Civil War. Written by Sir William Davenant, with

    Salmacida Spolia

    Salmacida_Spolia

  • Budapest
  • Capital and largest city of Hungary

    typically Islamic are still visible. An official term for the rationale is spolia. The mosque was called the djami of Pasha Gazi Kassim, and djami means congregational

    Budapest

    Budapest

    Budapest

  • Equites
  • Social class in ancient Rome

    have gained spolia 23 times. The higher the rank of the opponent killed in combat, the more prestigious the spolia, and none more so than spolia duci hostium

    Equites

    Equites

  • Colosseum
  • Ancient Roman amphitheater in Rome

    Although substantially ruined by earthquakes and stone robbers taking spolia, the Colosseum is still a renowned symbol of Imperial Rome and was listed

    Colosseum

    Colosseum

    Colosseum

  • Ceylon Journal of Science
  • Academic journal

    result of the merger of Annals of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Peradeniya, Spolia Zeylanica, and Bulletin of the Ceylon Fisheries. The journal had several

    Ceylon Journal of Science

    Ceylon_Journal_of_Science

  • Temple of Jupiter Feretrius
  • Lost ancient Roman temple

    According to Roman legend, the temple was dedicated by Romulus as a shrine for spolia opima, armor taken from an enemy commander whom a Roman had killed in single

    Temple of Jupiter Feretrius

    Temple of Jupiter Feretrius

    Temple_of_Jupiter_Feretrius

  • Viridomarus
  • Gallic military leader of the Gaesatae, mercenary commander (died 222 BC)

    in the process, Marcus Claudius Marcellus, the Roman leader, earned the spolia opima by killing Viridomarus in single combat. Plutarch. "Life of Marcellus

    Viridomarus

    Viridomarus

  • Nero Claudius Drusus
  • Roman general and politician (38–9 BC)

    single combat, and was likely the fourth and final Roman to achieve the spolia opima (for taking the armor and weapons of an enemy king after defeating

    Nero Claudius Drusus

    Nero Claudius Drusus

    Nero_Claudius_Drusus

  • Aulus Cornelius Cossus
  • 5th-century BC Roman general

    is famous for being the second Roman, after Romulus, to be awarded the spolia opima, Rome's highest military honour, for killing the commander of an enemy

    Aulus Cornelius Cossus

    Aulus Cornelius Cossus

    Aulus_Cornelius_Cossus

  • Suger's Eagle
  • Ancient Egyptian vase

    gold, and mounted in a medieval silver-gilt eagle. The vase is a medieval spolia piece and is displayed along with the French regalia in the Galerie d'Apollon

    Suger's Eagle

    Suger's Eagle

    Suger's_Eagle

  • Lars Tolumnius
  • Etruscan king of Veii (died 437 BC)

    and first King of Rome, had claimed the spolia opima, having slain the prince of Caenina. After Cossus, the spolia were claimed in BC 222 by the consul Marcus

    Lars Tolumnius

    Lars Tolumnius

    Lars_Tolumnius

  • Themistoclean Wall
  • Building in ancient Greece

    protection. The Themistoclean Wall was completed in 471 BC and built with spolia, old materials, in this case destroyed temples, statues, and other ruins

    Themistoclean Wall

    Themistoclean Wall

    Themistoclean_Wall

  • Spoliation
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    evidence in a criminal investigation The deconstruction of buildings for spolia Front Multiculturel Anti Spoliation Sanctuary of the Spoliation Spoliation

    Spoliation

    Spoliation

  • Ancient Egyptian architecture
  • architectural elements from ancient Egyptian monuments were often used as spolia for later constructions. A number of medieval mosques, for example, incorporate

    Ancient Egyptian architecture

    Ancient Egyptian architecture

    Ancient_Egyptian_architecture

  • Carolingian art
  • Art of the Frankish empire, ca. 780–900

    Fulda, Corvey, Trier, Müstair, Mals, Naturns, Cividale, Brescia and Milan. Spolia is the Latin term for "spoils" and is used to refer to the taking or appropriation

    Carolingian art

    Carolingian art

    Carolingian_art

  • Eliya
  • Genus of insects

    Eliya pictipes Uvarov, 1927 Eliya venusta Henry, 1933 Uvarov BP (1927) Spolia Zeylanica 14(1): 103. Orthoptera Species File (Version 5.0/5.0: retrieved

    Eliya

    Eliya

  • Cairo
  • Capital and largest city of Egypt

    al-Nasir Muhammad, and the Madrasa of Sultan Barquq. Some mosques include spolia (often columns or capitals) from earlier buildings built by the Romans,

    Cairo

    Cairo

    Cairo

  • Hohensalzburg head
  • The Hohensalzburg head is a Celtic marble head which was spolia in Hohensalzburg Fortress, Salzburg in Austria until 1956. The head is tentatively dated

    Hohensalzburg head

    Hohensalzburg head

    Hohensalzburg_head

  • Mausoleum of Shajar al-Durr
  • Historic monument and mausoleum in Cairo, Egypt

    run across the mausoleum's four walls. Repurposed by Shajar al-Durr as spolia, the beams were originally created for a Fatimid palace. They contain Fatimid

    Mausoleum of Shajar al-Durr

    Mausoleum of Shajar al-Durr

    Mausoleum_of_Shajar_al-Durr

  • Pseudaletis antimachus
  • Species of butterfly

    antimachus Staudinger, 1888 Pseudaletis nigra Holland, 1892 Pseudaletis spolia Riley, 1922 Pseudaletis dardanella Riley, 1922 Pseudaletis occidentalis

    Pseudaletis antimachus

    Pseudaletis antimachus

    Pseudaletis_antimachus

  • Townley Antinous
  • Bust of Antinous

    It and the remains of the statue to which it belonged were found used as spolia in a roadside wall near the Porta San Pancrazio, a gate in the Aurelian

    Townley Antinous

    Townley Antinous

    Townley_Antinous

  • Great Mosque of Sanaa
  • Mosque in Sanaa, Yemen

    earlier date of construction. The mosque was reportedly built in part from spolia from the Himyarite-era Ghumdan Palace and from the Axumite Christian Church

    Great Mosque of Sanaa

    Great Mosque of Sanaa

    Great_Mosque_of_Sanaa

  • Saï
  • Island in Sudan

    Ottoman Empire fort composed of sandstone quarried along the river banks, and spolia bearing the cartouche of Amenhotep IV, amongst other 18th Dynasty rulers

    Saï

    Saï

    Saï

  • Trinity
  • Christian doctrine that God exists in three persons

    are also grouped into three for this reason. This practice originated in spolia churches that were built from, and on top of, the remains of ancient pre-Christian

    Trinity

    Trinity

    Trinity

  • Clastidium
  • Human settlement in Italy

    Here in 222 BC, Marcus Claudius Marcellus defeated the Gauls and won the spolia opima; in 218 BC, Hannibal took it and its stores of grain by treachery

    Clastidium

    Clastidium

  • Neotemnopteryx
  • Genus of cockroaches

    Neotemnopteryx fulva Princis, K. (1951) Neue und wenig bekannte Blattarien aus dem Zoologischen Museum, Kopenhagen. Spolia Mus. Zool. Hauniensis 12, 5–72. v t e

    Neotemnopteryx

    Neotemnopteryx

  • Little Metropolis
  • Byzantine church in Athens, Greece

    cross-in-square style, it is, uniquely, almost entirely built of reused spolia from earlier buildings, ranging from Classical Antiquity to the 12th or

    Little Metropolis

    Little Metropolis

    Little_Metropolis

  • Temple of Clitumnus
  • Medieval church in Campello sul Clitunno, Italy

    the 6th century, as a church and had been constructed mainly of material (spolia) taken from ancient Roman structures in the neighbourhood. The source of

    Temple of Clitumnus

    Temple of Clitumnus

    Temple_of_Clitumnus

  • Sri Lankan leopard
  • Leopard subspecies

    Deraniyagala, P. E. P. (1956). "The Ceylon leopard, a distinct subspecies". Spolia Zeylanica. 28: 115–116. Pocock, R.I. (1939). "Panthera pardus (Linnaeus)

    Sri Lankan leopard

    Sri Lankan leopard

    Sri_Lankan_leopard

  • Caenina (town)
  • Town near ancient Rome

    the first temple in Rome) and offered the spoils of the enemy king as spolia opima. According to the Fasti Triumphales, Romulus celebrated a triumph

    Caenina (town)

    Caenina (town)

    Caenina_(town)

  • Giralda
  • Bell tower of Seville Cathedral in Seville, Spain

    Brill. ISBN 9789004161658. Rosser-Owen, Mariam (27 March 2014). "Andalusi Spolia in Medieval Morocco: 'Architectural Politics, Political Architecture'".

    Giralda

    Giralda

    Giralda

  • Roman sculpture
  • Sculpture of ancient Rome

    of the Roman Empire, many sculptures were lost, destroyed, or reused as spolia throughout the Middle Ages. The Renaissance renewed interest in Roman antiquity

    Roman sculpture

    Roman sculpture

    Roman_sculpture

  • San Giorgio Maggiore, Naples
  • Church in Naples, Italy

    Near the lateral door of the church is the marble seat, constructed from spolia, of St Severus, founder of the church. In the left of main altar of the

    San Giorgio Maggiore, Naples

    San Giorgio Maggiore, Naples

    San_Giorgio_Maggiore,_Naples

  • Honos
  • Deity

    slew the Gallic king, Viridomarus, at the Battle of Clastidium, to win the spolia opima, he vowed a temple to Honos and Virtus. He renewed this vow after

    Honos

    Honos

    Honos

  • Common tailorbird
  • Species of bird

    Lynx Edicions. p. 477. Cave, Walter A. (1913). "The Birds of Colombo". Spolia Zeylanica. 8: 94–115. Ali, S.; Ripley, S.D. (1997). Handbook of the birds

    Common tailorbird

    Common tailorbird

    Common_tailorbird

  • Portaria, Umbria
  • Philip and James, was built in the 11th century. Its construction reused spolia from the Roman site of Carsulae. The medieval structure stands on a small

    Portaria, Umbria

    Portaria, Umbria

    Portaria,_Umbria

  • Alçıtepe
  • Village in Çanakkale, Turkey

    such as a column in the village square or architectural elements reused as spolia. Following the departure of the Greek population in the Greco-Turkish population

    Alçıtepe

    Alçıtepe

    Alçıtepe

  • Lissus (Crete)
  • Former town

    The chapel of the Panagia, incorporating ancient spolia

    Lissus (Crete)

    Lissus (Crete)

    Lissus_(Crete)

  • St Martin's Church, Canterbury
  • Church in Kent, England

    the city at the time, and the church contains many reused Roman bricks or spolia, as well as complete sections of walls of Roman tiles. At the core of the

    St Martin's Church, Canterbury

    St Martin's Church, Canterbury

    St_Martin's_Church,_Canterbury

  • Patras Castle
  • Patras Castle, Greece

    re-using building material from pre-Christian structures. One of these spolia, the torso and head of a marble Roman statue, became part of the city's

    Patras Castle

    Patras Castle

    Patras_Castle

  • Bubo, Duke of the Frisians
  • be destroyed and carried back to Francia "a great mass of spoils" (magna spolia et praeda). The Latin title victor given him by the chroniclers may indicate

    Bubo, Duke of the Frisians

    Bubo,_Duke_of_the_Frisians

  • Single combat
  • Type of warfare

    Veientes in single combat and took the spolia opima. In the 3rd century BC; Marcus Claudius Marcellus took the spolia opima from Viridomarus, king of the

    Single combat

    Single combat

    Single_combat

  • Dante Alighieri
  • Italian writer and philosopher (1265–1321)

    Bertolo, Fabio M. (2003). "L'Officiolum ritrovato di Francesco da Barberino". Spolia – Journal of Medieval Studies. Archived from the original on April 22, 2023

    Dante Alighieri

    Dante Alighieri

    Dante_Alighieri

  • Forum of Augustus
  • Ancient Roman imperial forum in Rome

    princeps Senatus. Aulus Cornelius Cossus, consul in 428 BC, was awarded the spolia opima for killing the Etruscan king Lars Tolumnius during the Battle of

    Forum of Augustus

    Forum of Augustus

    Forum_of_Augustus

  • Victory
  • Success in any competition

    of victory taken from the defeated party, such as the enemy's weapons (spolia), or body parts (as in the case of head hunters). Mythology often deifies

    Victory

    Victory

    Victory

  • San Lorenzo in Piscibus
  • Church in Rome, Italy

    The spolia columns and exposed brick of the Romanesque interior

    San Lorenzo in Piscibus

    San Lorenzo in Piscibus

    San_Lorenzo_in_Piscibus

  • Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus
  • Temple on the Capitoline Hill of Ancient Rome

    fall of the empire. Remains of the last temple survived to be pillaged for spolia in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, but now only elements of the foundations

    Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus

    Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus

    Temple_of_Jupiter_Optimus_Maximus

  • Moesia
  • Province of the Roman Empire

    proclaimed this victory in 27 BC in Rome but blocked Cassius' entitlement to the Spolia opima and use of the term imperator apparently in favour of his own prestige

    Moesia

    Moesia

    Moesia

  • Portrait of the Four Tetrarchs
  • Sculpture outside the St Mark's Basilica in Venice, Italy

    Philadelphion in Constantinople, and was removed to Venice in 1204 or soon after. Spolia from the Fourth Crusade, the statues were originally designed as two separate

    Portrait of the Four Tetrarchs

    Portrait of the Four Tetrarchs

    Portrait_of_the_Four_Tetrarchs

  • Cathedral of Saint Domnius
  • Church in Split, Croatia

    changed to be in stylistic harmony with the other floors. Numerous ancient spolia and sculptures depicting griffins, lions, sphinxes and people were removed

    Cathedral of Saint Domnius

    Cathedral of Saint Domnius

    Cathedral_of_Saint_Domnius

  • Battle of Clastidium
  • Battle during the Roman-Gallic wars (222 BC)

    translation. The Romans won the battle, and in the process, Marcellus earned the spolia opima, one of the highest honors in ancient Rome, by killing the king in

    Battle of Clastidium

    Battle of Clastidium

    Battle_of_Clastidium

  • Bricolage
  • Creation of an artwork from a diverse range of things that happen to be available

    Intrapreneurial Bricolage Jugaad Jury rigging Kludge Life hack Maker culture Spolia Syncretism Pastiche Baldick, Chris (2008). The Oxford Dictionary of Literary

    Bricolage

    Bricolage

    Bricolage

  • Pliska
  • Town in Shumen, Bulgaria

    and burned Pliska in 811. Omurtag (r. 814–831) rebuilt the city, using spolia from nearby Roman buildings and employing late Roman-inspired rectilinear

    Pliska

    Pliska

    Pliska

  • Santa Maria in Cosmedin
  • Church in Rome, Italy

    by alternating groups of columns and piers; the unmatched columns were spolia (spoils) from older Roman buildings. Some scholars believe that the columns

    Santa Maria in Cosmedin

    Santa Maria in Cosmedin

    Santa_Maria_in_Cosmedin

  • Mosque–Cathedral of Córdoba
  • Cathedral and former mosque in Córdoba, Spain

    for the two-tiered design may have been more technical: unlike the large spolia columns available in Damascus, the columns available for reuse in Córdoba

    Mosque–Cathedral of Córdoba

    Mosque–Cathedral of Córdoba

    Mosque–Cathedral_of_Córdoba

  • Umayyad state of Córdoba
  • State in Islamic Iberia (756–1031 CE)

    associated with the caliphal period. These capitals later became prized spolia and can be found in later buildings across the region built under the Almoravids

    Umayyad state of Córdoba

    Umayyad state of Córdoba

    Umayyad_state_of_Córdoba

  • Harpocrates
  • God-child of Greek and Egyptian mythology

    today Augustine, The City of God, XVIII. Kinney, Dale (14 August 2014). "Spolia from the Baths of Caracalla in Sta. Maria in Trastevere". The Art Bulletin

    Harpocrates

    Harpocrates

    Harpocrates

  • Dipylon
  • Main gate of the city wall of ancient Athens

    themselves preserved several Archaic-period funeral monuments that were used as spolia during their construction, and were recovered by archaeologists. The existence

    Dipylon

    Dipylon

    Dipylon

  • Stele
  • Stone or wooden slab erected as a marker

    steles are sometimes found reused as Christian Armenian gravestones or as spolia in Armenian churches - Maranci suggests this reuse was a deliberate desire

    Stele

    Stele

    Stele

  • Hisar, Emirdağ
  • Neighbourhood in Emirdağ, Afyonkarahisar, Turkey

    site of ancient and Byzantine Amorium. The village was founded in 1892 and spolia from Amorium were used to build it. Mahalle Archived 2015-07-06 at the Wayback

    Hisar, Emirdağ

    Hisar, Emirdağ

    Hisar,_Emirdağ

  • Anaconda
  • Genus of snakes

    Heritage Library. Willey, Arthur (1904). "Some rare snakes of Ceylon". Spolia Zeylanica. 1 (3): 81–89 – via Internet Archive. Ferguson, Donald (1897)

    Anaconda

    Anaconda

    Anaconda

  • Afula
  • City in Israel

    Remains of Crusader fortress in Afula. Note the spolia: Roman sarcophagi as the top layer.

    Afula

    Afula

    Afula

  • Hassan Tower
  • Historic monument in Rabat, Morocco

    tower itself, although today it also retains one marble capital of Andalusi spolia. List of tallest structures built before the 20th century Frishman, Martin;

    Hassan Tower

    Hassan Tower

    Hassan_Tower

  • Qutb Minar
  • Minaret in the Mehrauli area of Delhi, India

    performed the ritual on the streets outside the mosque complex. Since the spolia of Jain and Hindu temples were used to construct the minaret, the right-wing

    Qutb Minar

    Qutb Minar

    Qutb_Minar

  • San Giovanni a Mare, Naples
  • Church in Naples, Italy

    1828. The church building has been recently restored. Interior columns are spolia. Arabic and Byzantine influences can be seen in some of the apse columns

    San Giovanni a Mare, Naples

    San Giovanni a Mare, Naples

    San_Giovanni_a_Mare,_Naples

  • Aachen Cathedral
  • Catholic cathedral in Aachen, Germany

    ancient and come from St. Gereon in Cologne. Charlemagne allowed further spolia to be brought to Aachen from Rome and Ravenna at the end of the 8th century

    Aachen Cathedral

    Aachen Cathedral

    Aachen_Cathedral

  • Saint Anne Church, Trabzon
  • Church in Trabzon, Turkey

    and a sanctuary flanked by side-chamber formed from three curved apses. Spolia is used in the building, with a classical sarcophagus used to form a tympanum

    Saint Anne Church, Trabzon

    Saint Anne Church, Trabzon

    Saint_Anne_Church,_Trabzon

  • Red-wattled lapwing
  • Species of bird

    "Note on the breeding habits of the Did-he-do-it Sarcogrammus indicus". Spolia Zeylanica. 10 (39): 397–398. Hayman, P.; J. Marchant; T. Prater (1986).

    Red-wattled lapwing

    Red-wattled lapwing

    Red-wattled_lapwing

  • List of former mosques in Greece
  • στο Koλλάκιο εκ νέου. Spolia, ιστορικές πληροφορίες και ερμηνευτικά ζητήματα [The Church of St John in the Collachium Anew: Spolia, Historical Information

    List of former mosques in Greece

    List of former mosques in Greece

    List_of_former_mosques_in_Greece

  • Ruins
  • Remains of human-made architecture

    Theodosianus, xv.1.14, 1.19, 1.43. Novellae maioriani, iv.1. See Dale Kinney, "Spolia from the Baths of Caracalla in Sta. Maria in Trastevere", The Art Bulletin

    Ruins

    Ruins

    Ruins

  • Panchlora hebardi
  • Species of cockroaches

    und wenig bekannte Blattarien aus dem Zoologischen Museum, Kopenhagen. Spolia Mus. Zool. Hauniensis, 12, 5–72. Cockroach Species File: species Panchlora

    Panchlora hebardi

    Panchlora_hebardi

  • Eurymedon Bridge (Aspendos)
  • Bridge in Pamphylia, Anatolia

    Pamphylia in southern Anatolia. The foundations and other stone blocks (spolia) of the Roman structure were used by the Seljuqs to build a replacement

    Eurymedon Bridge (Aspendos)

    Eurymedon Bridge (Aspendos)

    Eurymedon_Bridge_(Aspendos)

  • Temple of Saturn
  • Ancient religious monument in Rome, Italy

    the materials remaining were taken from other buildings. Examples of the spolia used to construct the Temple of Saturn include Egyptian granite column shafts

    Temple of Saturn

    Temple of Saturn

    Temple_of_Saturn

  • Castel Sant'Angelo
  • Historic building in Rome, Italy

    later was incorporated into a massive Renaissance baptistery. The use of spolia from the tomb in the post-Roman period was noted in the 16th century – Giorgio

    Castel Sant'Angelo

    Castel Sant'Angelo

    Castel_Sant'Angelo

  • Spoil
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Australian rules football Spoilage (disambiguation) Spoiler (disambiguation) Spolia (Latin, 'spoils'), stones taken from an old structure and repurposed "The

    Spoil

    Spoil

  • Disibodenberg
  • Abbey in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany

    1797 and 1814, during which the monastery's use as a quarry commenced. Spolia from Disibodenberg was widely used for infrastructure and buildings in the

    Disibodenberg

    Disibodenberg

    Disibodenberg

  • Civita Castellana
  • Comune in Lazio, Italy

    church with a small 12th-century belltower incorporating ancient Roman spolia. San Francesco: church rebuilt in the 18th century. Rocca: the citadel erected

    Civita Castellana

    Civita Castellana

    Civita_Castellana

  • Wall of Haseki
  • and medieval monuments were demolished and reused as building material (spolia) in the process. Haseki then promptly presented the Athenians with a bill

    Wall of Haseki

    Wall of Haseki

    Wall_of_Haseki

  • List of Roman bridges
  • cutwaters Also listed are bridges which feature substantially Roman material (spolia), as long as the later bridge is erected on the site of a Roman precursor

    List of Roman bridges

    List of Roman bridges

    List_of_Roman_bridges

  • Viterbo
  • Comune in Lazio, Italy

    residence or refuge in time of trouble in Rome. The columns of the palace are spolia from a Roman temple. Cathedral of San Lorenzo: Cathedral or duomo was originally

    Viterbo

    Viterbo

    Viterbo

  • Made in Chelsea series 1
  • season Title Original release date Duration UK viewers 1 1 "Ad Victorem Spolias – To The Victor Go The Spoils" 9 May 2011 (2011-05-09) 60 minutes 583,000

    Made in Chelsea series 1

    Made_in_Chelsea_series_1

  • Reginald Punnett
  • British geneticist (1875–1967)

    Ceylon Butterflies, with a suggestion as to the nature of Polymorphism', in Spolia Zeylanica, the journal of the Colombo Museum, in which he voiced his opposition

    Reginald Punnett

    Reginald_Punnett

  • Pieve di San Giovanni in Ottavo, Brisighella
  • Church in Brisighella, Italy

    sources and some of different sizes suggesting that they were derived a spolia from prior buildings. One column bears inscriptions from the era of the

    Pieve di San Giovanni in Ottavo, Brisighella

    Pieve di San Giovanni in Ottavo, Brisighella

    Pieve_di_San_Giovanni_in_Ottavo,_Brisighella

  • Brown-breasted flycatcher
  • Species of bird

    Lynx Edicions. p. 375. Wait, WE (1922). "The passerine birds of Ceylon". Spolia Zeylanica. 12: 114. Gould, John (1883). The birds of Asia. Volume 6. Baker

    Brown-breasted flycatcher

    Brown-breasted flycatcher

    Brown-breasted_flycatcher

  • Dosi (food)
  • Sri Lankan confectionery

    Publishers Pvt. Ltd. p. 119. ISBN 9781932705485. Colombo Museum, Colombo (1960). Spolia Zeylanica. Vol. 29–30. National Museums of Sri Lanka. p. 122. Rajapaksha

    Dosi (food)

    Dosi (food)

    Dosi_(food)

  • Henrietta Maria of France
  • Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland from 1625 to 1649

    works herself, including as an Amazon in William Davenant's 1640 "Salmacida Spolia". She was also a patron of English composer Nicholas Lanier, and was responsible

    Henrietta Maria of France

    Henrietta Maria of France

    Henrietta_Maria_of_France

  • Anjar, Lebanon
  • Place in Beqaa Governorate, Lebanon

    under a tetrapylon. The plinths, shafts and capitals of the tetrapylon are spolia reused in the Umayyad period. Smaller streets subdivide the western half

    Anjar, Lebanon

    Anjar, Lebanon

    Anjar,_Lebanon

  • Achinos, Phthiotis
  • Community in Greece

    Community The medieval tower of Achinos, built by reusing ancient material (spolia) Achinos Coordinates: 38°53′31″N 22°43′27″E / 38.89194°N 22.72417°E /

    Achinos, Phthiotis

    Achinos, Phthiotis

    Achinos,_Phthiotis

  • Rocchetta Mattei
  • Eclectic 19th-century castle in Emilia-Romagna, Italy

    the large central courtyard. Here several important pieces of medieval spolia are reused: the balcony of the so-called Pope's Room is carried by two carved

    Rocchetta Mattei

    Rocchetta Mattei

    Rocchetta_Mattei

  • Conversion of non-Islamic places of worship into mosques
  • Slave dynasty, who then constructed the Quwwat-ul-Islam mosque atop the spolia of original ancient temples in 1193 CE to celebrate his victory over Delhi

    Conversion of non-Islamic places of worship into mosques

    Conversion of non-Islamic places of worship into mosques

    Conversion_of_non-Islamic_places_of_worship_into_mosques

  • Romulus
  • King of Rome from 753 to 716 BC

    combat, Romulus stripped him of his armour, becoming the first to claim the spolia opima, and vowed to build a temple to Jupiter Feretrius. Antemnae and Crustumerium

    Romulus

    Romulus

    Romulus

  • Vibia Sabina
  • Roman empress from 116 to 136/137

    deification on the order of Hadrian." Some 150 years later, this was reused as spolia on the so-called Arch of Portugal, and in modern times moved to the Capitoline

    Vibia Sabina

    Vibia Sabina

    Vibia_Sabina

  • Palazzo Chigi of Ariccia
  • Works by Loreti, Guttembrun, Masucci, and Kobler The park contains Roman spolia and the remains of buildings used as part of a hunting preserve. Wikimedia

    Palazzo Chigi of Ariccia

    Palazzo Chigi of Ariccia

    Palazzo_Chigi_of_Ariccia

  • Palatine Chapel, Aachen
  • Church building in Aachen, Germany

    is used to create a sumptuous interior. The chapel makes use of ancient spolia, conceivably from Ravenna (Einhard claimed they were from Rome and Ravenna)

    Palatine Chapel, Aachen

    Palatine Chapel, Aachen

    Palatine_Chapel,_Aachen

  • Asian koel
  • Species of bird

    ISBN 0-7022-1015-3. Phillips, WWA (1948). "Cuckoo problems of Ceylon". Spolia Zeylanica. 25: 45–60. Lamba, BS (1976). "The Indian crows: a contribution

    Asian koel

    Asian koel

    Asian_koel

  • San Francesco, Amelia
  • Church in Amelia, Province of Terni. Umbria

    Todi. It is hypothesized that stone from an ancient Roman tomb was used as spolia to create the facade stones. The bell-tower was initially erected in 1447

    San Francesco, Amelia

    San Francesco, Amelia

    San_Francesco,_Amelia

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Online names & meanings

  • Sarge
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Sarge

    English : variant of Sark.German : unexplained.

  • Noushafarin
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Australian, Iranian, Muslim, Parsi

    Noushafarin

    Creator of Joy

  • LEMEK
  • Male

    Hebrew

    LEMEK

    (לֶמֶךְ) Hebrew name LEMEK means "powerful." In the bible, this is the name of the father of Tubal-Cain and the father of Noah. 

  • Muzainah
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Muslim

    Muzainah

    Small Drizzling Cloud; Name of a Sahabiyyah (RA); Arabic Tribe

  • Pinky
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Australian, English, Hindu, Indian, Jamaican, Kannada, Marathi, Modern, Muslim, Sikh, Sindhi, Telugu

    Pinky

    Most Beautiful; The Little Finger; Pink Coloured; Sweet; Pinkish

  • Ahrar | عہرار
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Ahrar | عہرار

  • Armes
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Armes

    English : variant of Harms.German : from a short form of a Germanic personal name containing the element ermin- ‘world’, ‘great’. See for example, Armentrout.

  • Kushi
  • Girl/Female

    Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Punjabi, Sikh, Telugu

    Kushi

    Happy; Happiness

  • Sabarishri | ஸபரீஷ்ரீ 
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Sabarishri | ஸபரீஷ்ரீ 

    Lord Ayyappa

  • Rajbir
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Rajbir

    Brave King

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Other words and meanings similar to

SPOLIA

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing SPOLIA

SPOLIA

  • Excoriation
  • n.

    Stripping of possession; spoliation.

  • Despoliation
  • n.

    A stripping or plundering; spoliation.

  • Rapine
  • n.

    The act of plundering; the seizing and carrying away of things by force; spoliation; pillage; plunder.

  • Spoliation
  • v. t.

    A process for possession of a church in a spiritual court.

  • Spoliative
  • a.

    Serving to take away, diminish, or rob; esp. (Med.), serving to diminish sensibily the amount of blood in the body; as, spoliative bloodletting.

  • Spoliate
  • v. t.

    To plunder; to pillage; to despoil; to rob.

  • Spoliation
  • v. t.

    Robbery or plunder in war; especially, the authorized act or practice of plundering neutrals at sea.

  • Spoliator
  • n.

    One who spoliates; a spoiler.

  • Spoliated
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Spoliate

  • Spoliation
  • v. t.

    Injury done to a document.

  • Exspoliation
  • n.

    Spoliation.

  • Spoliation
  • v. t.

    The act of plundering; robbery; deprivation; despoliation.

  • Spoliation
  • v. t.

    The act of an incumbent in taking the fruits of his benefice without right, but under a pretended title.

  • Spoliatory
  • a.

    Tending to spoil; destructive; spoliative.

  • Spoliating
  • p. pr. & vb. n.

    of Spoliate