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Rath: Epithet of Śuri, Etruscan deity identified with Apollo. Tarquinia was his sanctuary. [40] Satre: Etruscan deity, source of, or derived from, the Roman god Saturn. [40] Selvans: God who appears in the expression Selvansl Tularias, "Selvans of the boundaries", which identifies him as a god of boundaries. But also Selvans Calusta (see Calus ...
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Fredric Lehne (born February 3, 1959) [1] (sometimes credited as Fredric Lane) [2] [3] is an American actor of film, stage, voice and television.. Acting since 1978, he has appeared in more than 200 films, miniseries, and television episodes, as well as stage productions across the United States, from Broadway to Portland, Oregon.
Ratha or Rath also means a large, often very large, wheeled cart made of wood, on which the murti of a deity is carried in religious processions, some of which are very important festivals. The Ratha may be pulled by devotees with rope, or pulled by horses or elephants.
The Temple of Janus (Latin: Aedes Iani) at the Forum Holitorium was a Roman temple dedicated to the god Janus, located between the Capitoline Hill and the Tiber River near the Circus Flaminius in the southern Campus Martius. The temple was built during the First Punic War, after the Temple of Janus in the Roman Forum.
Der Januskopf (lit. ' The Head of Janus ') is a lost 1920 German silent film directed by F. W. Murnau.The film was an adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's 1886 novella Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Advertisement for The River of Romance, noting it was an adaptation of the E. J. Rath novel Sam. E.J. Rath is the pseudonym of writer Edith Rathbone Jacobs Brainerd (1885 – January 28, 1922) who was assisted with many of her writing projects by her husband Chauncey Corey Brainerd (April 16, 1874 – January 28, 1922), a Washington D.C. correspondent for the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.
The Temple of Janus stood in the Roman Forum near the Basilica Aemilia, along the Argiletum. It was a small temple with a statue of Janus , the two-faced god of boundaries and beginnings inside. Its doors were known as the "Gates of Janus", which were closed in times of peace and opened in times of war.