When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. The Richest Man in Babylon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Richest_Man_in_Babylon

    The Richest Man in Babylon is a 1926 book by George S. Clason that dispenses financial advice through a collection of parables set 4,097 years earlier, in ancient Babylon.The book remains in print almost a century after the parables were originally published, and is regarded as a classic of personal financial advice.

  3. George Samuel Clason - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Samuel_Clason

    He started writing the pamphlets in 1926, using parables that were set in ancient Babylon. Banks and insurance companies began to distribute the parables, and the most famous ones were compiled into the book The Richest Man in Babylon - The Success Secrets of the Ancients. [4] He is credited with coining the phrase, "Pay yourself first". [5]

  4. The Two Babylons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Two_Babylons

    The Two Babylons, subtitled Romanism and its Origins, is a book that started out as a religious pamphlet published in 1853 by the Presbyterian Free Church of Scotland theologian Alexander Hislop (1807–65). Its central theme is the argument that the Catholic Church is the Babylon of the Apocalypse which is described in the Bible. [1]

  5. Flag of the Isle of Man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_the_Isle_of_Man

    The appearance on the Isle of Man of the triskeles in the last third of the 13th century may well be connected with the regime change on the isle in 1265, from Crovan to Scots kings. The symbol is anciently closely associated with Sicily, well known as a tri-cornered island, and is attested there in proto-heraldry as early as the 7th century BC ...

  6. Triskelion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triskelion

    In the Hellenistic period, the symbol became associated with the island of Sicily, appearing on coins minted under Dionysius I of Syracuse beginning in c. 382 BCE. [2] It later appears in heraldry, and, other than in the flag of Sicily, came into use in the arms and flags of the Isle of Man (known in Manx as ny tree cassyn ' the three legs '). [3]

  7. Lion of Babylon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lion_of_Babylon

    The Lion of Babylon is an ancient Babylonian symbol. [1] History. Antiquity. The Lion of Babylon symbolically represented the King of Babylon. [1] The ...

  8. Coat of arms of the Isle of Man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Coat_of_arms_of_the_Isle_of_Man

    The present coat of arms is an augmentation of honour of the ancient arms of the feudal Lord of Man. [2] It is unknown when the triskeles device was originally adopted as a symbol relating to the Isle of Man. [5] It appears associated with the Isle in several late 13th-century rolls of arms, such as the Camden Roll, Herald's Roll, Segar's Roll ...

  9. How Many Miles to Babylon? (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_Many_Miles_to_Babylon...

    How Many Miles to Babylon? is a novel by Irish writer Jennifer Johnston, first published in 1974. The novel explores the relationship of two men, an Anglo-Irish aristocrat, Alexander Moore, and a lower class son of a labourer on his lands, Jerry, as they experience the First World War .