Archbishop Arkadios II died 643 was the head of the Church of Cyprus during the 630s. He was a supporter of the Monothelitism formula also propounded by Patriarch Sergius I of Constantinople , Pope Honorius I , and Emperor Heraclius . Arkadios wrote an epistle supporting Monothelitism and disparaging its opponents, of which the chief then was Sophronius of Jerusalem . When Sophronius became Patriarch in 634, Sophronius sent a letter to Arkadios requesting him to call a synod . Arkadios invited Cyrus of Alexandria , as well as Sergius and Honorius. Kyros arrived himself, and so did representatives of Constantinople and Rome. Then Arkadios invited Sophronius. Sophronius and his prot g Maximus the Confessor each sent representatives of his own. When the Jerusalmite delegation arrived, Arkadios received the guests with honor. The next morning, all 46 of the dignitaries haggled over the details. The anti Monothelites agreed upon a common letter, but Arkadios declared its suggestions to be anathema. Sophronius asked him, What then do you want that this should reach the emperor? Arkadius retorted, It is because of your lack of belief, and because of the false doctrine you and your companions hold, in that you resist the truth of Monothelitism . Cyrus then cut short the debate and ordered Sophronius s letter to issue to the Emperor Heraclius. Heraclius promptly sided with Monothelism and issued an Edict to all the metropolitan sees probably the Ecthesis . When this Edict arrived in Cyprus, Arkadios added his signature to the list. Writings Epistle on Monothelitism Lost. Start box Succession box before Plutarch title Archbishop of Cyprus years 630 643 after Serghios end box References George of Reshaina, An Early Life of Maximus the Confessor trans. Sebastian P Brock, pp.  315 7 references DEFAULTSORT Arkadios 02 Category Year of birth missing Category 643 deaths Category Archbishops of Cyprus Category Greek Cypriot people Category 7th century Byzantine people Category ... more details
GENA stands for General Event Notification Architecture . GENA Base defines an HTTP notification architecture that transmits notifications between HTTP resources. An HTTP resource could be any object which might need to send or receive a notification, for example a distribution list, buddy list, print job, etc. It was defined in Internet Draft draft cohen gena p base 01.txt now expired . GENA Base Client to Arbiter provides for the ability to send and receive notifications using HTTP over TCP IP and administratively scoped unreliable multicast User Datagram Protocol UDP . Provisions are made for the use of intermediary arbiters, called subscription arbiters, which handle routing notifications to their intended destination. It was defined in http tools.ietf.org html draft cohen gena client now expired . History During July 13 14 1998 the University of California Irvine convened WISEN the Workshop on Internet Scale Event Notification. This event brought together a number of experts of various fields and included a presentation on GENA by Josh Cohen of Microsoft. Delegates showcased their event notification architectures and haggled over requirements of the same. Josh s final slide includes the bullet points GENA is being implemented by Microsoft Products and Our wish is to collaborate to agree on a standard. GENA or other, we will comply. Interest in event notification appears to have waned after 1998 as participants were unable to come to common definitions of what is required for the definition of notification services and protocols. GENA was briefly considered for use in the Internet Printing Protocol but found a niche as part of the Universal Plug and Play UPnP architecture. Internet Drafts GENA Base http tools.ietf.org html draft cohen gena p base July 9, 1998 Client to Arbiter http tools.ietf.org html draft cohen gena client June 24, 1999 http www.upnp.org download draft cohen gena client 01.txt September 6, 2000 See also Notification system for details on gener ... more details
Marcus Antonius Gnipho fl. 1st century BC was a grammarian and teacher of rhetoric of Gaul ish origin who taught in ancient Rome . Born in Gaul , he was Child abandonment exposed as a child, but was found, and grew up a Slavery in antiquity slave . He was later freed, and according to Roman naming conventions took the nomen and praenomen of his former master, one Marcus Antonius disambiguation Marcus Antonius . He may have been educated in Alexandria . He had a great memory and was well read in both Ancient Greek Greek and Latin . He was first employed as the private tutor of the young Julius Caesar , and later set up a school in his own house, where it is said he never haggled over pay, but relied on his pupils generosity. The great orator Cicero Marcus Tullius Cicero is said to have frequented his school while praetor in 66 BC. Atteius the Philologist was another of his pupils. He wrote a number of works, including De Latino Sermone On the Latin Language in two books. The surviving Rhetorica ad Herennium has been ascribed to him, but this is not widely accepted otherwise, none of Gnipho s works survive. Scholarly opinion in antiquity was that only De Latino Sermone was his, and that all other works ascribed to him were written by his disciples. He died at the age of fifty. References Suetonius , Lives of Eminent Grammarians Wikisource Lives of Eminent Grammarians 7 7 , Wikisource Lives of Eminent Grammarians 10 10 Quintilian , Institutio Oratoria http penelope.uchicago.edu Thayer E Roman Texts Quintilian Institutio Oratoria 1B .html 6.23 1 6.23 Macrobius , Saturnalia http penelope.uchicago.edu Thayer L Roman Texts Macrobius Saturnalia 3 .html 12 3.12 William Smith lexicographer William Smith , Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology , 1870, http www.ancientlibrary.com smith bio 1387.html Vol. 2 p. 297 External links http rhetoric.byu.edu Primary 20Texts Ad 20Herennium.htm Rhetorica ad Herennium English translation DEFAULTSORT Gnipho, Marcus Antonius ... more details
The Grand Babylon Hotel is a novel by Arnold Bennett , published in 1902 in literature 1902 , about the mysterious disappearance of a German prince. It originally appeared as a serial in the Daily Mail . Plot introduction The main protagonists are an American millionaire, Theodore Racksole, and his daughter Nella Helen . While staying at the supremely exclusive Grand Babylon Hotel, Nella asks for a steak and Bass beer for dinner, but the order is refused. To get her what she wants Racksole buys the entire hotel, for 400,000 and a guinea so the previous owner can say that he haggled with the multi millionaire businessman . Strange things are happening in the hotel. First, Racksole notices the headwaiter, Jules, winking at his daughter s friend, Reginald Dimmock, while they consume their expensive steak. He dismisses the headwaiter. The next day Miss Spencer, the pretty, efficient hotel clerk who has been employed there for years, disappears. It appears that she just took her things and left, no one knows when or where. And Prince Eugen, a prince regnant of Posen, who was to come to the hotel and meet his youthful uncle Prince Aribert he and the nephew are of the same age , never turns up. Then the body of Dimmock, who was an equerry to the princes, come ahead to prepare for their visit, is found. He was obviously poisoned. And soon after, Dimmock s body disappears. The same evening the hotel is having a ball in the Gold Room, hosted by a Mr and Mrs Sampson Levi. There is a special secret window though which one can observe the room and the guests. Racksole looks out of it and sees among the guests the dismissed headwaiter, Jules. Racksole runs out to confront him and throw him out, but can t find him. He comes back to the secret window to find Jules, staring intensely into the ball room. Racksole orders him out of the hotel for the second time. Prince Aribert, who met Nella in Paris while he was travelling incognito under the name of Count Steenbock, confides the who ... more details
infobox Tolkien character image character image caption character name Mouth of Sauron BR True Name Unknown character alias Lieutenant of Barad d r br Messenger of Mordor character race Man Middle earth Men date created Book s The Return of the King Portal Middle earth At its head there rode a tall and evil shape, mounted upon a black horse The rider was robed all in black, and black was his lofty helm yet this was no Ringwraith , but a living man. The Lieutenant of the Tower of Barad d r he was, and his name is remembered in no tale for he himself had forgotten it, and he said I am the Mouth of Sauron. nowiki nowiki ref name mouth ME ref rotk The Black Gate Opens ref The Mouth of Sauron is a fictional character in J. R. R. Tolkien s Middle earth legendarium . He appears in The Lord of the Rings specifically in the chapter The Black Gate Opens in the third volume, The Return of the King as the chief emissary of Sauron . He belonged to the race of the Black N men reans and briefly appeared in person when he haggled with the Army of the West in front of the Black Gate Middle earth Black Gate Morannon in Elvish languages Middle earth Elvish , trying to convince Aragorn and Gandalf to give up and let Sauron win the war for Middle earth. When Gandalf turned his proposal down, the Mouth of Sauron set all the armies of Mordor to Battle of the Morannon attack them. Also known as the Lieutenant of Barad d r , he had served Sauron for much of his life, learning great sorcery but forgetting his own name. As the Mouth of Sauron, he entered the service of the Dark Tower when it first rose again . There is some dispute over the length of time this implies. If it refers to Sauron s most recent return to Mordor, the Mouth of Sauron would have served Sauron for some 68 years when he encountered Aragorn and Gandalf. But some have theorized Citation needed date March 2010 that since Mordor first rose again during Sauron s return shortly after the Akallab th destruction of N menor , th ... more details
About the poet artist underground publisher the political scientist Steven B. Smith professor Infobox Writer for more information see Template Infobox Writer doc name Steven B. Smith image birthname birthdate birth year and age 1946 birthplace Wallace, Idaho deathdate deathplace occupation Artist , Poet , Publisher nationality U.S.A American Steven B. Smith born 1946 in Wallace, Idaho , is an Underground art underground artist and poet from Cleveland, Ohio . He published the cult underground classic ArtCrimes , a zine influenced by the beat poetry beats . ref name Utter Smith s art and poetry uses cultural themes as found objects with a Dadaism Dadaist influence. ref name Norman Norman, Sally. http agentofchaos.com review1984 d.html Spiritual Fulfillment, Dialogue Magazine Sept., 1984 . ref ref name Litt Litt, Steven. http agentofchaos.com review1992.html Aggressive Nastiness Jabs At Viewer, The Plain Dealer May 27, 1992 . ref His life is pockmarked with colorful episodes such as stealing cars when he was thirteen, getting kicked out of the U.S. Naval Academy , armed robbery, and prison. ref name Sparks ref name Tranberg ref name Utter2 Utter, Douglas Max. http agentofchaos.com prisonbreak.html Over the Wall The Restless Steven B. Smith Is Moving On, Cleveland Free Times Mar. 15, 2006 . ref Early years Smith was born in Wallace, Idaho, to Pappy Smith and Florence E. Mother Dwarf Smith. He was raised in Paradise Prairie, twenty miles outside of Spokane, Washington . He stole thirteen cars when he was thirteen. ref name Sparks In 1968 Smith was one of thirteen Midshipmen middies ousted by the Naval Academy for smoking Marijuana pot . ref name Barnes Barnes, Bart. http agentofchaos.com review1968.html 13 Middies Ousted In Marijuana Case, The Washington Post Feb. 21, 1968 . ref He haggled a deal with the government upon discharge they agreed to pay for his education. ref name Sparks ref name Tranberg He went on to receive a bachelor s degree in English and philosophy wi ... more details
Times, September 24, 1985 Frantz and Koziol, Jailed Underboss Says Mob Haggled Over Teamsters ... Says Mob Haggled Over Teamsters Boss. Chicago Tribune. September 29, 1985. Friendly, Jonathan. Reporters ... more details