There were many famous cloisters in Byzantium where such women placed themselves at the service of society as a whole. |
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As soon as he became emperor, Henry VI demanded that Byzantium yield to him all the Greek lands that had been conquered by the Normans. |
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Or book a table at Byzantium, a stylishly bohemian room with wood vigas overhead. |
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After the victory over the Persians in 479 B. C. the Greeks offered this tripod at the oracle of Delphi, from where it was brought to Byzantium. |
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Other administrative units were devised in due course, such as the shires in England and the themes in Byzantium. |
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There is, however, a Byzantium illustration depicting what appears to be a fishing rod or pole. |
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The day was rough by normal standards, that is, the standards of an average Roman citizen who live in Byzantium. |
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This would continue for some time in Byzantium and in Scandinavia, in polities of strong public power or weak aristocracies. |
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He then shifts to the use of gold in Greece, Rome, and Byzantium, initially as adornment but later as a medium of exchange. |
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Geser tells a tale about the Virgin of Byzantium to whom somebody bore ill will and put a spell. |
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The Bogomils ' ideas were formed under the influence of a sect widely spread in Byzantium. |
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Miniature mosaic icons, as suggested by preserved examples, were produced for a very limited time in Byzantium and were highly prized. |
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Some are encrusted with costume jewelry, evoking the roughly bejeweled icons of Byzantium. |
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Moreover, in the Syriac rites of Antioch and Byzantium, hymnody is developed at the expense of the psalter. |
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Byzantium by Ben Stroud A debut collection of stories that spans countries and eras with delightful ease. |
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If so, does this not detract from the major contributions that the Greco-Roman civilisations and Byzantium have made to European ideas? |
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In the last third of the seventh century, when Byzantium definitively lost its African possessions, ceramics and amphorae from the Aegean and from the east become predominant. |
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There was a considerable lapse of time before the history of Greek writing resumed at Byzantium. |
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His debut collection of short stories, Byzantium, takes place across thousands of years of history all over the globe. |
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To say that, Mr Bourlanges, would be like saying that Byzantium is and has never been European. |
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There was a second renewal of interest in Byzantium in the eighth century. |
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Conversely, he does not believe that modern ideologies such as Marxism, post-structuralism, and nationalism are useful tools for the historian of Byzantium. |
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In Kiev, far from the reach of Byzantium, the regent Olga laid the foundation for the future Russian Empire in 957 when she converted to the Orthodox Church. |
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In this way one can contribute with efforts to bring about closer ties between Rome and Byzantium and also for a deeper European unity. |
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The sun of the Roman Empire set, so to speak, in the East, and it is to Byzantium we must turn our eyes for the continuation of the art of horsemanship as of the Fine Arts. |
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Byzantium often gets a dreadful press: it is synonymous in many minds with palace intrigues, ending in matricide or mutilation. |
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Byzantium stands as an important symbol in the poems of Yeats. |
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In other words, Mr Prodi, when one seeks to create a synthesis of East and West, the result is Byzantium, and you know how that ended. |
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Part of it is transported to Ravenna by Theodoric, and another to Byzantium. |
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Taro a vegetable which was known in Byzantium but is not known in Greece, is often included in Cypriot casserole dishes, for which the general name is kapamas. |
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The Commission acts as the sole legislator, as in the Byzantium of ancient times under Emperor Constantine. |
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Between 763 and 1139 the city, now a dukedom independent of Byzantium, was a cultural centre and an important trade centre with the East. |
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The court of the supreme Kyrgyz ruler was visited by diplomats from Byzantium, Persia, India, China and the Arab countries. |
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At that time, Byzantium was very rich and an object of envy by the more primitive western rulers. |
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When Pope Gregory II condemned iconoclasm, the Patriarch in Byzantium, for whom the Roman pontiff was at best primus inter pares, was furious. |
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He is a fine late Romanesque painter open to more modern influences, particularly those emanating from Byzantium, perhaps via Franciscan illuminated manuscripts. |
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The Ottomans or Osmanlis established themselves in north-western Anatolia, expanding at the expense of Byzantium and the Italian trading colonies of the Aegean shores. |
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All trade in Greek wine ceased in the late 15th century, when, after the fall of Byzantium, the Ottoman Turks occupied the Peloponnesian shore and drove out its inhabitants. |
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In contexts almost beyond enumeration, Byzantium was vital to the continuity of civilisation. |
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All these neighbors lacked a key resource that Byzantium had taken over from Rome, namely a formalized legal structure. |
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Without a doubt, Byzantium signals the arrival of an incredible talent. |
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Even in distant Byzantium Procopius heard tales of migrations to the Frankish mainland from the island, largely legendary for him, of Brittia. |
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Although it would recover Constantinople in 1261, Byzantium fell in 1453 when Constantinople was taken by the Ottoman Empire. |
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Constantine subsequently established a second capital city in Byzantium, which he renamed Constantinople. |
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It has been argued that Byzantium under the Komnenian rule was more prosperous than at any time since the Persian invasions of the 7th century. |
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The situation became worse for Byzantium during the civil wars after Andronikos III died. |
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However, Byzantium, like the Roman Empire, remained a polyglot, multinational and polysectarian state during the greater part of its existence. |
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Byzantium is a term used by modern historians to refer to the later Roman Empire. |
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Much of this involves the Persian or Sasanid dynasty, which contended with Byzantium and reached its high point in the mid-to-late sixth century. |
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The Classical Antiquity II exhibition presents long-vanished advanced civilizations from two millennia, from Hellenism to the late Antiquity and Byzantium. |
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In the face of this antithesis, I cannot help thinking of Byzantium, of the balsamic and self-satisfied utterances of the Byzantine administrators at a time when their world was sliding into oblivion. |
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From Byzantium the Suzdalians adopted the general features of the square plan with semicircular apses and the four columns supporting a cupola with its circular drum. |
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Turnery was used in making chairs, stools, and couches in Byzantium, and it seems that this technique was known across Europe as far north as Scandinavia. |
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What represents archaeology in a country rich of several thousand years history, with unique artistic accounts, with the imprint of prestigious civilizations: Hittite, Persian, Greek, Greco-Roman, Byzantium, Ottoman? |
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Its original state depicted the six rulers of Byzantium, Persia, Abyssinia, Spain, China and the Turks, whose names were written in Arabic and Greek. |
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Mr Koder has been quick to urge his fellow Byzantinists to avoid complacency or introspection, the failings which spelled doom for Byzantium itself. |
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Dubrovnik's origins date back to antiquity: the city initially developed under the authority of Byzantium, then of Venice, and later as an independent republic. |
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We are discovering the Slavic world again, the shaping of a spiritual landscape through orthodoxy, the old Byzantium and the new Moscow as centers. |
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At the fall of the Roman Empire, Constantine the Great established in 325 A. D. the Byzantine Empire with its capital at Constantinople, the old Byzantium. |
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The Commissioner is in any case a historian and knows that the Emperor of Byzantium, an empire that lasted for 1Â 000 years in Europe, supported the fight against poverty in every speech he made. |
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While campaigning against Byzantium he ordered the covering of the tomb of his fellow Carthaginian Hannibal with fine marble. |
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On the other hand, Theodotus of Byzantium, Artemon, and Paul of Samosata all accepted the virgin birth. |
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In Byzantium, much of this work devoted to preserving Hellenistic thought in codex form was performed in scriptoriums by monks. |
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As a result, Byzantium revived Classical models of education and libraries. |
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Serbian state, law and culture was built on the foundations of Rome and Byzantium. |
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According to Hippolytus of Rome, Andrew preached in Thrace, and his presence in Byzantium is also mentioned in the apocryphal Acts of Andrew. |
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Excavations found imported fabrics from England, Byzantium, Persia and central Asia. |
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And while the Pope supported the reintroduction of the iconic veneration, he politically digressed from Byzantium. |
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Excavations found imported fabrics from England, Byzantium, Persia, and central Asia. |
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The wealth and income of the Rus' depended heavily upon trade with Byzantium. |
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The outcome indicates increased military might by Byzantium since 911, suggesting a shift in the balance of power. |
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Byzantium quickly became the main trading and cultural partner for Kiev, but relations were not always friendly. |
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Early Russian painting is represented in icons and vibrant frescos, the two genres inherited from Byzantium. |
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One of the economic foundations of Byzantium was trade, fostered by the maritime character of the Empire. |
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The writings of Classical antiquity were cultivated and extended in Byzantium. |
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Roger himself never went on an expedition against Byzantium, instead handing command to the skillful George. |
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Amalfi, perhaps the first of the maritime republics to play a major role, had developed extensive trade with Byzantium and Egypt. |
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Venice remained an ally of Byzantium in the fight against Arabs and Normans. |
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Despite the link with Byzantium, it also maintained good relations with the Turks, enabling it to serve as central Italy's gateway to the Orient. |
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They built a system of principalities from the Volga south to the steppe and traded south to Byzantium and eastward to the Bulgars. |
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However, those items could also have been Byzantine imports, and there is no reason to assume that the Varangians travelled significantly beyond Byzantium and the Caspian Sea. |
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By the 12th century it had come to Europe either from the Byzantium or Moorish Spain where the mechanism was raised higher above the ground on a more substantial frame. |
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The work only survives in some 374 fragments, by far the majority being quoted in the geographical lexicon Ethnika compiled by Stephanus of Byzantium. |
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Bulgaria and Byzantium entered a long period of peaceful relations, and the Empire was now free to concentrate on the eastern front against the Muslims. |
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The powerful Bulgarian Empire was the main rival of Byzantium for control of the Balkans for centuries and from the 9th century became the cultural centre of Slavic Europe. |
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Is it any wonder that the more mature Ankori would devote himself to exploring the rise and spread of 'sectarian' Karaism in Byzantium to which he sailed as often as possible? |
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According to Stephanus of Byzantium and the philosopher Plato the poet's father was named Euphemus, but an inscription on a herm from Tivoli listed him as Euclides. |
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He is considered the founder and the first bishop of the Church of Byzantium and is consequently the patron saint of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople. |
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When king Rastislav of Moravia asked Byzantium for teachers who could minister to the Moravians in their own language, Byzantine emperor Michael III chose these two brothers. |
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Dandolo's aim was to expand Venice's power in the eastern Mediterranean, and Philip intended to restore his exiled nephew, Alexios IV Angelos, to the throne of Byzantium. |
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Unmistakable Insular influence can be seen in Carolingian manuscripts, even though these were also trying to copy the Imperial styles of Rome and Byzantium. |
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Constantine's administrative and monetary reforms, that reunited the Empire under one emperor, and rebuilt the city of Byzantium changed the high period of the ancient world. |
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During the Viking Age, Scandinavian men and women travelled to many parts of Europe and beyond, in a cultural diaspora that left its traces from Newfoundland to Byzantium. |
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As early as 839, when Swedish emissaries are first known to have visited Byzantium, Scandinavians served as mercenaries in the service of the Byzantine Empire. |
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As late as fourteenth-century Byzantium, the exegesis of biblical theophanies was still providing the exegetical infrastructure for the Hesychast controversy. |
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Only little survives of the epitomes, through citations in the work Stephanus of Byzantium, but in the case of Menippus there is also some manuscript material. |
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The western Mediterranean came under the control of the barbarians, after their invasion split the Empire in two, while Byzantium dominated the eastern half of the sea. |
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