mosaic
Quite well, he lived at Longwood House a choice estate with his servants and retinue.
Those involved were the French army commanded by King John II and the English army commanded by The Black Prince. The French were defeated, and King John captured with all his retinue.
He ruled on Elba, but had no leadership function at all on St. Helena except over his personal staff and retinue.
YES. Ancient Egyptians offered numerous animal sacrifices to appease the gods of the Egyptian Pantheon. While there was minimal human sacrifice to the gods, there was human retainer sacrifice, which was when servants in a Pharaoh's retinue would be killed when the Pharaoh died in order to accompany the Pharaoh in the afterlife. This was discontinued in later dynasties.
The tomb would be packed the same way we pack a suitcase for a trip. Sometimes part of the Pharaohs retinue would be buried with them. They would have their trusted servants in the next life. Items holding special meaning to the Pharaoh, food, wine even a boat might be included. What ever made the Pharaoh happy in this life was going to go with them into the next.
A retinue was taking care of the King
The King's royal retinue was treated harshly.
No. A retinue is a group of people who follow another person. An example of a retinue would be a star with hairdressers, agent, and others who travel with them.
Retinue is a noun. It's a group of advisors or assistants accompanying someone important.
It means entourage basically.
Solidarity, solo, alone
The Queen's retinue is the group of people who are always, or almost always, with the Queen, wherever she goes in her role as monarch. They may not be with her in her private apartments, although some may.
The president has many retinues of high importance
a 'retinue' or 'following'. In ancient Rome a comitatus was a mobile field army that would travel with the emperor.
retinal, retinue, rotated, rascals, rinsing, rushing, rhythms
A diplomatic suite or retinue refers to the group of officials and staff accompanying a diplomat or ambassador during their diplomatic missions. This entourage typically includes advisors, assistants, security personnel, and other support staff who facilitate the diplomat's functions, such as negotiations and official events. The composition and size of the retinue can vary depending on the status of the diplomat and the nature of the mission. Their presence helps ensure that the diplomat can effectively carry out their responsibilities while representing their home country.
guard, bodyguard, convoy, entourage, retinue, companion, partner, attendant, guide, beau, chaperon