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Honkai: Star Rail – Acheron: Relics Acheron benefits from having offensive stats like Attack, Critical Damage, and Critical Hit Rate boosted. In addition, she’ll want as high a Speed stat as ...
Relic of the tooth of the Buddha, venerated in Sri Lanka as a cetiya "relic" of Gautama Buddha, the founder of Buddhism. Śarīra, a generic term referring to Buddhist relics. In Buddhism, relics of the Buddha and various sages are venerated. After the Buddha's death, his remains were divided into eight portions.
PET: VIC-20: Temple of Apshai: 1979: Amiga: An early role-playing video game released during the height of the initial popularity of Dungeons & Dragons, the first entry in the Dunjonquest series was an enormous hit for Epyx, then known as Automated Systems Amstrad CPC: Apple II: Atari 8-bit: Atari ST: Commodore 64: PET: VIC-20: MS-DOS: Mac: TRS ...
Archaon, also known as Archaon the Everchosen, is a fictional character in the Warhammer franchise, leader of the forces of Chaos, and one of the primary antagonists in multiple settings and media owned by Games Workshop.
During the 4th century, the decline of democracy and the return of aristocratic dominance was accompanied by more magnificent tombs that announced the occupants' status—most notably, the vaulted tombs of the Macedonians, with painted walls and rich grave goods, the best example of which is the tomb at Vergina thought to belong to Philip II of ...
Acheron (LV-426), the planet-like moon where the film Alien and its sequel (as well as numerous other events in the Alien franchise storyline) are primarily set; Acheron Parthenopaeus, a character in the Dark-Hunter series of romance books "Acheron: Part 1" and "Acheron: Part 2", a two-part episode from the television series The Walking Dead
Joseph Wright of Derby – William and Margaret from Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, c. 1785 Ballad collections had appeared before but Percy's Reliques seemed to capture the public imagination like no other.
The need for a viaticum figures in a myth-tinged account of the death of King William II of England, told by the Anglo-Norman chronicler Geoffrey Gaimar: dying from a battle wound and delirious, the desperate king kept calling out for the corpus domini (Lord's body) until a huntsman [161] acted as priest and gave him flowering herbs as his ...