Pax (from lat. - “ peace , absence of war”; goes back to the pre-Indo- war. * Pak- “strengthen”) - a word, combined with the household name of a country, nation, people or a certain concept, indicating the era of prosperity, the dominance of some empire or the same ideas, that is, literally, "The world is ruled by <...> ". The term as a symbol of the imperial theory of the world ( Pax Romana ) was first used by the Roman philosopher-stoic Lucius Anney Seneca , after which the expression firmly stuck in historical and political science literature.
- Pax aegyptiaca
- Pax americana
- Pax assyriaca
- Pax britannica
- Pax dei
- Pax europaea
- Pax germanica
- Pax hispanica
- Pax hollandica
- Pax islamica
- Pax mongolica
- Pax lithica
- Pax nicephori
- Pax Tokugawa [1]
- Pax ottomana
- Pax khazarica
- Pax praetoriana
- Pax romana
- Pax sinica
- Pax sovietica
- Pax syriana
- Pax nomadica
- Pax slavica
- Pax tatarica
- Pax rossica
- Pax ucrainica
- Pax christiana
Notes
- ↑ Akira Hayami, Osamu Saitō, Ronald P. Toby, The Economic History of Japan, 1600-1990: Emergence of economic society in Japan, 1600-1859 , Oxford University Press, 2004, p. 87