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The World God Only Knows (神のみぞ知るセカイ, Kami nomi zo Shiru Sekai) is a manga series written and illustrated by Tamiki Wakaki, and serialized by Shogakukan in the manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Sunday since April 9, 2008, until its finale at chapter 268.
The ancient city is currently located about 15–20 meters (49–66 ft) below the streets of the middle- and lower-class suburbs of Al-Matariyyah, [1] Ain Shams, and Tel Al-Hisn [24] in northern Cairo. The area is about 1.5 kilometers (1 mi) west of the modern suburb which bears its name. [1]
A tradition of Latin literature [32] names the Etruscan city of Manthua, later Mantua, after the deity. [22] Mariś, Maris: A class of divinity used with epithets: mariś turans, mariś husurnana, mariś menitla, mariś halna, mariś isminthians. The appearances in art are varied: a man, a youth, a group of babies cared for by Menrva. [28]
Mystical City of God is a book written in the 17th century by the Franciscan nun Venerable Mary of Jesus of Ágreda. According to María de Ágreda, the book was to a considerable extent dictated to her by the Blessed Virgin Mary and regarded the life of the Virgin Mary and the divine plan for creation and the salvation of souls.
Initially no city had Ninhursag as its tutelary goddess. [116] Later her main temple was the E-Mah in Adab, [108] originally dedicated to a minor male deity, Ašgi. [117] She was also associated with the city of Kesh, [108] where she replaced the local goddess Nintur, [111] and she was sometimes referred to as the "Bēlet-ilī of Kesh" or "she ...
A City God (Chinese: 城隍神; pinyin: Chénghuángshén; lit. 'god of the boundary'), is a tutelary deity in Chinese folk religion who is believed to protect the people and the affairs of the particular village, town or city of great dimension, and the corresponding location in the afterlife. City God cults appeared over two millennia ago ...
A small group including Suh, Ren, Mac, and Hak-Kun land first and explore a large bio-mechanical alien structure they call "God's City". At the top of the structure, Suh disappears into a room, then returns minutes later in tears claiming that God has died. She removes her helmet and is immediately killed by the toxic air inside God's City.
The Kalam cosmological argument was influenced by the concept of the prime mover, introduced by Aristotle.It originates in the works of theologian and philosopher John Philoponus (490–570 AD) [10] and was developed substantially under the medieval Islamic scholastic tradition during the Islamic Golden Age.