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A battle in The Sacred Stones: shown are Eirika and an enemy soldier during the player's turn.. Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones is a tactical role-playing game where players take the role of royal siblings Eirika and Ephraim during separate campaigns as they fight hostile forces invading their homeland, along with allies acquired on their journey. [5]
Philo then refers to a magical stone he calls a baitylia, which was invented when Ouranos first rained them from heaven (making it a meteorite; this is a common mythological etyiology for the origins of these sacred stones [8]). Philo's discussion is only extant in quotations from Eusebius who lived in the fourth century. [15]
Lapis manalis (Stone of the Manes), was either of two sacred stones used in the Roman religion. One covered a gate to Pluto , abode of the dead; Festus called it ostium Orci, "the gate of Orcus". The other was used to make rain; this one may have no direct relationship with the Manes, but is instead derived from the verb manare, "to flow".
Sacred Stone, 2004 novel by Clive Cussler and Craig Dirgo; The Six Sacred Stones, 2007–2008 novel by Matthew Reilly; Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones, a tactical role-playing game; Double Dragon III: The Sacred Stones, 1991 Nintendo game; Legend of the Sacred Stone, Taiwanese puppet film
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It is the seventh stone in Ezekiel 28:13 (in the Hebrew text, but occurring fifth in the Greek translation). The stones is also mentioned with frequency elsewhere (Exodus 24:10, Job 28:6,16, Song 5:14, Isaiah 54:11, Lamentations 4:7; Ezekiel 1:26, 10:1). Sappheiros is also the second foundation stone of the celestial Jerusalem (Revelations 21:19).
Double Dragon III: The Sacred Stones, released in Japan as Double Dragon III: The Rosetta Stone (ダブルドラゴンIII ザ・ロゼッタストーン), is a side-scrolling beat-'em-up produced for the Nintendo Entertainment System in 1991.
Sledovik Stone from Mendeleevo, Russia. Sledovik (Следовик, in Russian literally – a Footprint Stone) is a most widespread type of sacred stones, venerated in Slavic (Russian, Belarusian, Ukrainian) and Finnic (Karelia, [1] Merya [2]) pagan practices.