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Type of ancient Greek body armour
Kotthybos (Greek: κότθυβος) was a type of Macedonian body armour. The name originally referred to a metallic cooking pot used by ancient Macedonian soldiers
Kotthybos
Ancient Greek kingdom in the southern Balkans
with protective helmets, greaves, and either cuirasses breastplates or kotthybos stomach bands, and armed with sarissa pikes and daggers as secondary weapons
Macedonia_(ancient_kingdom)
Army of Philip II and Alexander the Great
indicated in the Military Decree of Amphipolis that the phalangites wore the kotthybos, a form of defence of uncertain nature. Alexander did not use the phalanx
Ancient_Macedonian_army
Macedonian helmet
bearing the weapons appropriate to them are to be fined: two obols for the kotthybos, the same amount for the konos, three obols for the sarissa..." Kausia
Konos
Macedonian army's tactics
rimless, Heavy cuirasses were replaced by a lighter armour, called the kotthybos. The doru (δόρυ) spear of the hoplite was replaced by the much longer
Military tactics of Alexander the Great
Military_tactics_of_Alexander_the_Great
appropriate to them are to be fined according to the regulations: for the kotthybos, two obols, the same amount for the konos, three obols for the sarissa
Military_Decree_of_Amphipolis
Political history topic
breastplates were only worn by military officers, while pikemen wore the kotthybos stomach bands along with their helmets and greaves, wielding a dagger
Government of Macedonia (ancient kingdom)
Government_of_Macedonia_(ancient_kingdom)
Lyons Korkyra (mythology) Korkyra (polis) Korophaioi Korybantes Kottabos Kotthybos Kouloura Kourion Kouroi of Flerio Kouros Kouros of Apollonas Kouros of
Index of ancient Greece-related articles
Index_of_ancient_Greece-related_articles
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Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Hertfordshire, recorded in 1262 as Croyroys, from Old French croiz ‘cross’ (Latin crux, genitive crucis) + the female personal name Royse (see Rose 2). Ekwall mentions forms from only twenty years later in which the place name first more or less assumes its modern form. It is not clear, however, whether this is to be interpreted as ‘Royse’s stone’ (with the second element Middle English stÅn, from Old English stÄn) or ‘settlement at (Croiz) Royse’ (with the second element Middle English toun, from Old English tÅ«n).English : habitational name from a place in West Yorkshire, so called from the genitive case of the Old English byname HrÅr, meaning ‘vigorous’ (or its Old Norse cognate Róarr) + Old English tÅ«n ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’.English : Americanized form of one or more like-sounding Jewish surnames.
Male
English
(×ֱלְיָסָף) Anglicized form of Hebrew Elyacaph, ELYASAF means "God increases the family." In the bible, this is the name of a leader of the tribe of Gad.
Girl/Female
Bengali, Indian, Telugu
Whole World
Girl/Female
Danish, Finnish, French, German, Spanish, Swedish, Swiss
Staff of the Gods; Meditation Staff; Joyful
Girl/Female
Hindu
Holy, Sacred, Freshness, Purity
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Toward Your Goal / Path
Boy/Male
Hindu
Lord Rama
Girl/Female
Latin American Greek
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Telugu
Wife of King Dilip
Boy/Male
Norse
Fighter.
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