Aglaé

Aglaé (other form: Aglaë) is a French female given name.

Famous persons with this name are:

  • Charlotte Aglaé d'Orléans (1700-1761), the daughter of Philippe II, Duke of Orléans.
  • Aglaé Louise Françoise Gabrielle de Polignac (1768 – 1803), an 18th-century French noblewoman.
  • Countess Marie Aglaë Kinsky of Wchinitz and Tettau, the wife and cousin of Hans-Adam II, Prince of Liechtenstein.
  • See also

  • French frigate Aglaé (1788), a 32-gun frigate of the French Navy.
  • Aglae, a genus of euglossine bees.
  • Aglaea (Greek: Αγλαΐα), the name of five figures in Greek mythology.
  • AGLAE, Accélérateur Grand Louvre d'analyse élémentaire, a particle physics facility in the Musée du Louvre.

  • AGLA

    AGLA(אגלא) is a notariqon (kabbalistic acronym) for Atah Gibor Le-olam Adonai,"You, O Lord, are mighty forever." It is said daily in the second blessing of the Amidah, the central Jewish prayer. Also seen as Athah gabor leolah, adonai, (אתה גבור לעולם אדני - Thou art powerful and eternal, Lord) Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers has suggested an arbitrary interpretation of AGLA (אגלא) as "A the one first, A the one last, G, the trinity in unity, L, the completion of the Great Work." According to The Triangular Book of the Count of St Germain God by the name of AGLA was responsible for the preservation of Lot and his family from the fire of Sodom and Gomorrah.

    Example of AGLA Monogram

    A monograph for AGLA appeared in Stephan Michelspacher's book Spiegel der Kunst und Natur (The Mirror of Art and Nature), which was published in Augsburg, 1615. This was an Alchemical work strongly influenced by Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa's view of the Kabbalah and magic. Adam McLean describes the centre panel as "two circular diagrams with the German GOTT (the name of God) around the outside, and also the Alpha and Omega and the monograph which may be the name of God, Agla. This represents the beginning - alpha - within the end - omega, the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet. This relates to claim related in the Book of Revelation that Jesus was "the "Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last" (22.13).

    AGLA (disambiguation)

    AGLA is a kabbalistic acronym. AGLA may also refer to:

  • AGLA France (Association des Gays et Lesbiennes Arméniens de France)
  • Agrupación Guerrillera de Levante y Aragón, group of Spanish Maquis
  • Fiend

    Fiend may refer to:

  • An evil spirit or demon in mythology
  • Fiend (Dungeons & Dragons), a collective term for malicious creatures in the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game
  • Fiends (album), by Christian hardcore band Chasing Victory
  • Fiend (rapper) (born 1976), rapper formerly with No Limit Records
  • "Fiend" (song), a 2002 song by Coal Chamber
  • Fiend Club, a fan-club for horror-punk pioneers The Misfits
  • F(r)iend, a song by In Flames from the album Soundtrack to Your Escape
  • Fiend (song)

    "Fiend" is a song by Coal Chamber, from their third album, Dark Days. It is one of the band's most well known songs and is thought to be about how the band and other bands and the nu metal genre were getting heavily criticized at the time.

    Track listing

  • "Fiend" - 3:01
  • Music video

    Fafara and Rascon drive to a suburban house, where two children are playing outside, their mother, horrified, runs out and ushers them back inside, Fafara and Rascon then walk to the house's garage where Nadja and Cox are waiting, then they perform the song while an increasing crowd of teenagers listens outside.

    References

  • "Coal Chamber Serves Up Its 'Dark Days'". New.music.yahoo.com. Retrieved 2012-01-27.
  • "Coal Chamber - Fiend". YouTube. Retrieved 2012-01-27.
  • External links

  • Lyrics of this song at MetroLyrics

  • Fiend (Dungeons & Dragons)

    Fiends is a term used in the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game to refer to any malicious otherworldly creatures within the Dungeons & Dragons universe. These include various races of demons and devils that are of an evil alignment and hail from the Lower Planes. All fiends are extraplanar outsiders.

    The most common types

    Demons

    The most widespread race of fiends are the demons, a chaotic evil race native to the Abyss; they are rapacious, cruel and arbitrary. The dominant race of demons is the tanar'ri /təˈnɑːri/. The Abyss and its population are both theoretically infinite in size. "True" tanar'ri such as the balors (originally called Balrogs) and the six-armed serpentine mariliths push other weaker tanar'ri around and organise them into makeshift armies for battle. Demon lords and demon princes such as Orcus, Demogorgon, Zuggtmoy, Graz'zt and countless others rule over the demons of their individual layers of the Abyss, in as much as the chaotic demons can be ruled over.

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