HISTORICAL WORD | MEANING |
antiquity | old times especially before the Middle Ages |
apprentice | person who learns a skill from an expert |
artifact | object made by human beings |
barbarian | person who is uncultured or uncivilized |
chivalry | medieval knightly system showing courtesy and bravery |
conqueror | person especially king who takes possession of territory by force |
consul | official chosen by vote to govern Rome; State agent in foreign country |
crusade | medieval military expedition to recover Palestine; campaign against recognized evil |
descendant | person born in the same family with common ancestor |
edict | order or official statement issued by authority |
entrepreneur | person who takes financial risks hoping for large profits and control of commercial enterprise |
exile | long absence from one's country as punishment |
gipsy, gypsy | member of a wandering race especially Asian |
hermit | person who has withdrawn from society and is living alone |
humanism | literary culture and intellectual movement during the Renaissance with devotion to human interests |
inhabitant | person who dwells in a place |
knight | person raised to honorable military rank |
mandate | order to act from the League of Nations |
Middle Ages | period about A.D. 1000 - 1400; period of history in Europe after fall of the Roman Empire |
missionary | person who preaches a religion or goes on religious missions |
mystic | person who believes in spiritual power or hidden meaning |
nationalism | patriotic feelings for one's country |
navigator | person who directs the course of a ship or voyage often using charts |
Nazi | member of German National Socialist party |
pacificist | person opposed to force, war and serving in the military |
Pan-Africanism | movement for political union of all Africans |
partisan | person committed to a party, side or cause |
patrician | person of noble birth especially wealthy landowner in ancient Rome |
patriot | lover of one's country |
philosopher | person in the pursuit of wisdom and knowledge |
plebeian | person of low birth especially common person in ancient Rome |
pogrom | organized massacre especially of Jewish community in Russia |
portrait | painting, photograph or drawing of a person, especially face portrait |
preacher | person who delivers sermons and talks in public about a religion or belief |
proletariat | lowest working classes or common people |
propaganda | means of spreading a doctrine or idea |
pyramid | monumental stone tomb with sloping sides meeting at apex in which Egyptian Pharaoh's body is placed after death |
reign | period of rule |
savior | person who saves from ruin; redeemer; deliverer |
siege | operations by army to gain possession of fortified place |
stigmata | marks corresponding to Christ's wounds made by nails |
usury | lending of money at exorbitant or illegal rates of interest especially in the Middle Ages |
vassal | person who holds land of a superior lord by feudal tenure |