Alexander stood at the edge of the balcony for a moment, contemplating the quandary, intently observed by Constantine. |
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And after last night, with her crying those huge, snotty tears over Constantine, she has to be gone. |
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At that time, Constantine created a completely new alphabet which corresponded to the Slavonic language. |
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Alexander extended his hand to Constantine and they shook, complimenting each other on their skill as swordsmen. |
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Now Constantine had had enough of their pagan attempts to frustrate his policies. |
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Constantine shimmied until beads of perspiration gathered on his shiny forehead. |
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Sergeant Caroline Constantine, 31, is currently on the bandmaster's course at the Royal Military School of Music at Kneller Hall. |
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As soon as Constantine heard of their departure, he sent a chiding letter to Mahan, and bade him mend his pace. |
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For reasons of what I suppose is identifiability, Constantine has been Americanized. |
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By the power of the cross, Constantine the Great defeated the tyrant and entered Rome victoriously. |
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A philosopher, his original name was Constantine but he became better known by his name in religion, Cyril, which he adopted on his deathbed. |
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Everyone's hair is greased up into a 50s do, which makes it hard to recognize Constantine and Bo, remade into Elvis-y toons. |
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Suddenly Constantine advanced and Alexander was driven back, parrying Constantine's attacks with his great sword. |
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The chi-rho became extremely popular after Emperor Constantine adopted the symbol for his military banners after seeing a vision of it in the sky. |
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Elaine Constantine is another female filmmaker making her feature film directorial debut this month, as she brings Northern Soul to the big screen. |
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The council concluded with the emperor Constantine insisting that the bishops come to an agreement over the wording of the creed. |
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Since Constantine talked to the New York Post last fall, Eliot and Silda Spitzer have cut him off. |
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He plays Dominic Badguy, who is in cahoots with Constantine, the evil frog. |
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In his early reign, the coinage of Constantine advertised Mars as his patron. |
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The African bishops could not come to terms and the Donatists asked Constantine to act as a judge in the dispute. |
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Three regional Church councils and another trial before Constantine all ruled against Donatus and the Donatism movement in North Africa. |
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In 317 Constantine issued an edict to confiscate Donatist church property and to send Donatist clergy into exile. |
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He had Constantine's principal court supporter executed and Constantine abandoned plans to march to Honorius's defence. |
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Constantine reappears as a soldier in Russia in the final and title story. |
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His son Constantine IV succeeded him, a brief usurpation in Sicily by Mezezius being quickly suppressed by the new emperor. |
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After this, Constantine had Athanasius banished since he considered him an impediment to reconciliation. |
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Driencourt was accompanying in Setif a mobile mission of French companies which should head Tuesday to Constantine then to Annaba. |
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But here Leithart uses the active voice and sees Constantine as the baptizer, which I find theologically and liturgically astonishing. |
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He plays an Interpol agent who is chasing Constantine and Dominic. |
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As full time students at Constantine College of Technology, we also used the Magnet for our end of term booze-ups. |
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Stuttgart Ballet is renowned for its leading men, but even by the German company's standards, Constantine Allen is an overachiever. |
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Constantine laid down the legal, fiscal, and structural foundations for Christianizing the world. |
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The 62-year-old Dubliner was accompanied by the movie's director Constantine Costas Gavras and his wife Michelle at Cineworld. |
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According to this legend, Constantine was soon baptized, and began the construction of a church in the Lateran Palace. |
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During the medieval period, Britons regarded Constantine as a king of their own people, particularly associating him with Caernarfon in Gwynedd. |
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They had their son Constantine, who succeeded his father as King of Britain before becoming Roman Emperor. |
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Constantine surrendered in 411 with a promise that his life would be spared, and was executed. |
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In 410, the Roman civitates of Britannia rebelled against Constantine and evicted his officials. |
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As for Constantine III, he was not equal to the intrigues of imperial Rome and by 411 his cause was spent. |
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Constantine III became ruler, but he then left for Gaul and withdrew more troops. |
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Constantine II ruled Scotland, apart from the southwest, which was the British Kingdom of Strathclyde. |
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In 935 a charter was attested by Constantine, Owain of Strathclyde, Hywel Dda, Idwal Foel, and Morgan ap Owain. |
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Olaf escaped back to Dublin with the remnant of his forces, while Constantine lost a son. |
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Alexander faced pressure from his brother, Duke Constantine, to make peace with Napoleon. |
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The usable model at hand, when Constantine wanted to memorialise his imperial piety, was the familiar conventional architecture of the basilicas. |
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Constantine built a basilica of this type in his palace complex at Trier, later very easily adopted for use as a church. |
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He hands the crown to his kinsman Constantine and is taken to the isle of Avalon to be healed of his wounds, never to be seen again. |
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Helena subsequently gives birth to a son who becomes the Emperor Constantine the Great, giving a British pedigree to the Roman imperial line. |
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Constantine ruled the Roman Empire as sole emperor for the remainder of his reign. |
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Constantine himself wanted such a library but his short rule denied him the ability to see his vision to fruition. |
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The Library of the Patriarchate of Constantinople was founded most likely during the reign of Constantine the Great in the 4th century. |
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His gold medal at the 2012 Olympics was presented by two Royal former Olympians, Princess Anne and King Constantine of Greece. |
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Constantine subsequently established a second capital city in Byzantium, which he renamed Constantinople. |
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In 940 Constantine III abdicated and took the position of abbot of the monastery of St Andrews. |
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Part two consists of a condemnation of five British kings, Constantine, Aurelius Conanus, Vortiporius, Cuneglas, and Maelgwn. |
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Constantine III initially rebelled against Honorius and took further troops to Gaul, but was later recognised as a joint emperor. |
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Learie Constantine, a West Indian cricketer, was a welfare officer with the Ministry of Labour when he was refused service at a London hotel. |
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In 331, Constantine I commissioned Eusebius to deliver fifty Bibles for the Church of Constantinople. |
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In 1915, Britain offered Cyprus to Constantine I of Greece on condition that Greece join the war on the side of the British, which he declined. |
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Emperor Michael II caught wind of the matter and ordered general Constantine to end the marriage and cut off Euphemius' head. |
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The expedition also received strong support from Constantine I of Logudoro and his base of Porto Torres. |
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As the dispute could not be settled, the Byzantine emperor, Tiberius II Constantine, undertook to arbitrate. |
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According to Jordanes' Getica, the Hasdingi came into conflict with the Goths around the time of Constantine the Great. |
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Dacians are represented in the statues surmounting the Arch of Constantine and on Trajan's Column. |
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Constantine was in Milan to celebrate the wedding of his sister to the Eastern Emperor, Licinius. |
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The pope's right to proclaim successors was based on the Donation of Constantine, a forged Roman imperial decree. |
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Throughout the reign of emperor Constantine the Great, the Visigoths continued to conduct raids on Roman territory south of the Danube River. |
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Constantine also enumerates the names of the Dnieper cataracts in both Rhos and in Slavic languages. |
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Constantine the Great was baptized by the Arian bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia. |
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Constantine introduced important changes into the Empire's military, monetary, civil and religious institutions. |
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He perfected Constantine I's coinage system by definitively setting the weight of the copper follis, the coin used in most everyday transactions. |
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His successor, Constantine V, won noteworthy victories in northern Syria and thoroughly undermined Bulgarian strength. |
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A nephew of the last Emperor, Constantine XI, Andreas Palaiologos claimed to have inherited the title of Byzantine Emperor. |
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Constantinople had been an imperial capital since its consecration in 330 under Roman Emperor, Constantine the Great. |
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Constantine and his Greek troops guarded the Mesoteichion, the middle section of the land walls, where they were crossed by the river Lycus. |
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Long before the fall of Constantinople, Demetrius had fought for the throne with Thomas, Constantine, and their other brothers John and Theodore. |
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At the urging of his foreign minister, the Greek adventurer Constantine Phaulkon, Narai turned to France for assistance. |
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In 292 Constantius, the father of Constantine I defeated the Franks who had settled at the mouth of the Rhine. |
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In the year of 948 Byzantine Emperor Constantine mentioned of trade of goods, between the Don Cossacks in their home capital. |
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The debate about whether believers prior to Constantine were antimilitarist is an old one. |
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Until the time of the Avignon Papacy, the residence of the pope was the Lateran Palace, donated by the Roman emperor Constantine the Great. |
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The pope may have utilized the forged Donation of Constantine to gain this land, which formed the core of the Papal States. |
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In December 2003, General Constantine Chiwenga, was promoted and appointed Commander of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces. |
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Barnes's principal gravamen seems to be that I am reluctant to accept his own, maximalist image of Constantine. |
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Celebrity pedalers, such as Kerry Butler and Constantine Maroulis from the Broadway show Rock of Ages, joined in. |
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Constantine went for a 12-liter bottle of Veuve Clicquot called a balthazar. |
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Faced with petitions from the Donatists, in 311 Constantine made a decision of great significance for the future. |
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Constantine then successfully used Britain as the starting point of his march to the imperial throne, unlike the earlier usurper, Albinus. |
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His son Constantine was instantly proclaimed as successor by the troops based in the fortress. |
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Building work in the city continued in the fourth century under Constantine and later Count Theodosius. |
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Fausta learned of the plot and warned Constantine, who put a eunuch in his own place in bed. |
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Constantine was the son of Flavius Valerius Constantius, a Roman Army officer, and his consort Helena. |
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Constantine was sent east, where he rose through the ranks to become a military tribune under the emperors Diocletian and Galerius. |
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As emperor, Constantine enacted many administrative, financial, social, and military reforms to strengthen the empire. |
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The age of Constantine marked a distinct epoch in the history of the Roman Empire. |
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The Papal claim to temporal power in the High Middle Ages was based on the supposed Donation of Constantine. |
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Constantine was a ruler of major importance, and he has always been a controversial figure. |
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The Vita creates a contentiously positive image of Constantine, and modern historians have frequently challenged its reliability. |
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The fullest secular life of Constantine is the anonymous Origo Constantini. |
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Constantine probably spent little time with his father who was an officer in the Roman army, part of the Emperor Aurelian's imperial bodyguard. |
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Constantine went to the court of Diocletian, where he lived as his father's heir presumptive. |
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Constantine received a formal education at Diocletian's court, where he learned Latin literature, Greek, and philosophy. |
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Constantine recognized the implicit danger in remaining at Galerius's court, where he was held as a virtual hostage. |
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By the time Galerius awoke the following morning, Constantine had fled too far to be caught. |
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Before dying, he declared his support for raising Constantine to the rank of full Augustus. |
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The Alamannic king Chrocus, a barbarian taken into service under Constantius, then proclaimed Constantine as Augustus. |
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Constantine sent Galerius an official notice of Constantius's death and his own acclamation. |
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Wishing to make it clear that he alone gave Constantine legitimacy, Galerius personally sent Constantine the emperor's traditional purple robes. |
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Constantine accepted the decision, knowing that it would remove doubts as to his legitimacy. |
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Constantine drove them back beyond the Rhine and captured two of their kings, Ascaric and Merogaisus. |
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Following Galerius' recognition of Constantine as caesar, Constantine's portrait was brought to Rome, as was customary. |
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He offered to marry his daughter Fausta to Constantine, and elevate him to Augustan rank. |
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In return, Constantine would reaffirm the old family alliance between Maximian and Constantius, and offer support to Maxentius' cause in Italy. |
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Constantine now gave Maxentius his meagre support, offering Maxentius political recognition. |
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Maximian was forced to abdicate again and Constantine was again demoted to Caesar. |
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Constantine soon heard of the rebellion, abandoned his campaign against the Franks, and marched his army up the Rhine. |
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It made little difference, however, as loyal citizens opened the rear gates to Constantine. |
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Constantine initially presented the suicide as an unfortunate family tragedy. |
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According to this, after Constantine had pardoned him, Maximian planned to murder Constantine in his sleep. |
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Constantine ordered his troops not to loot the town, and advanced with them into northern Italy. |
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Turin refused to give refuge to Maxentius' retreating forces, opening its gates to Constantine instead. |
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Other cities of the north Italian plain sent Constantine embassies of congratulation for his victory. |
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Brescia's army was easily dispersed, and Constantine quickly advanced to Verona, where a large Maxentian force was camped. |
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Constantine sent a small force north of the town in an attempt to cross the river unnoticed. |
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Ruricius gave Constantine the slip and returned with a larger force to oppose Constantine. |
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Constantine refused to let up on the siege, and sent only a small force to oppose him. |
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Constantine progressed slowly along the Via Flaminia, allowing the weakness of Maxentius to draw his regime further into turmoil. |
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Constantine deployed his own forces along the whole length of Maxentius' line. |
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Unlike his predecessors, Constantine neglected to make the trip to the Capitoline Hill and perform customary sacrifices at the Temple of Jupiter. |
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Constantine also attempted to remove Maxentius' influence on Rome's urban landscape. |
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In the following years, Constantine gradually consolidated his military superiority over his rivals in the crumbling Tetrarchy. |
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In either 314 or 316 AD, the two Augusti fought against one another at the Battle of Cibalae, with Constantine being victorious. |
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Constantine and his Franks marched under the standard of the labarum, and both sides saw the battle in religious terms. |
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Constantine built the new Church of the Holy Apostles on the site of a temple to Aphrodite. |
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In February 313, Constantine met with Licinius in Milan, where they developed the Edict of Milan. |
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In the late winter of 332, Constantine campaigned with the Sarmatians against the Goths. |
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In 334, after Sarmatian commoners had overthrown their leaders, Constantine led a campaign against the tribe. |
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Constantine resettled some Sarmatian exiles as farmers in Illyrian and Roman districts, and conscripted the rest into the army. |
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In the last years of his life Constantine made plans for a campaign against Persia. |
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Constantine planned to be baptized in the Jordan River before crossing into Persia. |
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It has been thought that Constantine put off baptism as long as he did so as to be absolved from as much of his sin as possible. |
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Constantine was succeeded by his three sons born of Fausta, Constantine II, Constantius II and Constans. |
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The Byzantine Empire considered Constantine its founder and the Holy Roman Empire reckoned him among the venerable figures of its tradition. |
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During his life and those of his sons, Constantine was presented as a paragon of virtue. |
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In both medieval East and West, Constantine was presented as an ideal ruler, the standard against which any king or emperor could be measured. |
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Burckhardt's Constantine is a scheming secularist, a politician who manipulates all parties in a quest to secure his own power. |
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Piganiol's Constantine is a philosophical monotheist, a child of his era's religious syncretism. |
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Barnes' Constantine experienced a radical conversion, which drove him on a personal crusade to convert his empire. |
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The current Gregorian ecclesiastical rules that determine the date of Easter trace back to 325 CE at the First Council of Nicaea convened by the Roman Emperor Constantine. |
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The window depicts St Michael at the top and nine Cornish saints, Piran, Petroc, Pinnock, Germanus, Julian, Cyriacus, Constantine, Nonna and Geraint in tiers below. |
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Liv later leaves town, passing on her scry map and pendant to Constantine. |
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The idyllic beach, popular for windsurfing and kitesurfing, is also just a few miles east of Constantine Bay, where Margaret Thatcher used to holiday regularly. |
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But the quality of the jokes and songs varies wildly as Kermit lookalike and crime-lord Constantine plans to steal the Crown Jewels with the help of Dominic Badguy. |
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This document, accepted as genuine until the 15th century, states that Constantine the Great placed the entire Western Empire of Rome under papal rule. |
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While Constantine toured Britain and Gaul, Maxentius prepared for war. |
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Constantine ordered his men to set fire to its gates and scale its walls. |
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Constantine I and Licinius, the two Augusti, by the Edict of Milan of 313, enacted a law allowing religious freedom to everyone within the Roman Empire. |
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He died in York in July 306 with his son Constantine I at his side. |
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Since the days of the Emperor Constantine in the 4th century European states saw themselves as having a central role in the government of the Church. |
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Departing from Geoffrey of Monmouth's history in which Mordred is left in charge, Malory's Arthur leaves his court in the hands of Sir Constantine of Cornwall and an advisor. |
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The Church grew rapidly until finally legalized and then promoted by Emperors Constantine and Theodosius I in the 4th century as the state church of the Roman Empire. |
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Following the withdrawal of the Britannic field army between 407 and 410 by the usurper Constantine III the garrisons on the Wall probably lost troops as well. |
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Instead, the orator proclaims that Constantine experienced a divine vision of Apollo and Victory granting him laurel wreaths of health and a long reign. |
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In 310 under Constantine a bridge was built over the Rhine at Cologne. |
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The last, Constantine III, raised an army from the remaining troops in Britannia, invaded Gaul and defeated forces loyal to Honorius led by Sarus. |
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In 904 a battle was fought in the vicinity of Scone, often referred to as the Battle of Scone, between the Scots led by King Constantine II of Scotland and the Vikings. |
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According to Constantine VII, the Varangians used boats on their trade route from the Varangians to the Greeks, along Dniester and Dnieper and along the Black Sea shore. |
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In 332, Constantine helped the Sarmatians to settle on the north banks of the Danube to defend against the Goths' attacks and thereby enforce the Roman Empire's border. |
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In his description of the events in Milan in his Life of Constantine, Eusebius eliminated the role of Licinius, whom he portrayed as the evil foil to his hero Constantine. |
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Constantius was not born to the purple and Maximianus was the only original member of the First Tetrarchy from whom Constantine could satisfactorily derive his rule. |
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The tetrarchy collapsed, however, in 313 and a few years later Constantine I reunited the two administrative divisions of the Empire as sole Augustus. |
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Byzantine Emperor Constantine XI wrote to Pope Nicholas for help. |
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The Trinidadian cricketer Learie Constantine was ennobled in 1969 and took the title Baron Constantine of Maraval in Trinidad and Nelson in the County Palatine of Lancaster. |
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Thus Constantine became the sole emperor of the Roman Empire. |
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Constantine the Great is known to have raised the five scholae of horsemen who formed the actual lifeguard of the prince, and followed his person whenever he went out to war. |
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Constantine could recall his presence at the palace when the messenger returned, when Diocletian accepted his court's demands for universal persecution. |
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It is unlikely that Constantine played any role in the persecution. |
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Generations later there was the story that a divine vision led Constantine to this spot, and an angel no one else could see, led him on a circuit of the new walls. |
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The young prince was chased to the Adriatic littoral and fled to Constantinople to plead for assistance from Constantine V, who was waging war with Bulgaria. |
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Constantine was able to spend a year in northern Britain at his father's side, campaigning against the Picts beyond Hadrian's Wall in the summer and autumn. |
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Constantine considered Constantinople his capital and permanent residence. |
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Here, in 313 AD, Roman Emperor Constantine issued the famous Edict of Milan that gave freedom of confession to all religions within the Roman Empire. |
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The usable model at hand, when Emperor Constantine I wanted to memorialize his imperial piety, was the familiar conventional architecture of the basilica. |
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Fearing a possible naval attack along the shores of the Golden Horn, Emperor Constantine XI ordered that a defensive chain be placed at the mouth of the harbour. |
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Later medieval legend told of a Coel, apparently derived from Coel Hen, who was the father of Saint Helena and the grandfather of Roman Emperor Constantine the Great. |
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After his promotion to emperor, Constantine remained in Britain, driving back the tribes of the Picts and secured his control in the northwestern dioceses. |
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Constantine then resolved to campaign against Persia himself. |
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Also, Constantine the Great was given the role of primus inter pares. |
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Soon after the Feast of Easter 337, Constantine fell seriously ill. |
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When Diocletian redivided the Empire, Crete was placed, along with Cyrene, under the diocese of Moesia, and later by Constantine I to the diocese of Macedonia. |
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The first depth measurements of the Norwegian Sea were performed in 1773 by Constantine Phipps aboard HMS Racehorse, as a part of his North Pole expedition. |
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Constantine remained aloof from the Italian conflict, however. |
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Constantine himself disliked the risks to societal stability that religious disputes and controversies brought with them, preferring where possible to establish an orthodoxy. |
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He announced that Constantine was dead, and took up the imperial purple. |
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His minting was on a small scale, however, and the coin only entered widespread circulation under Constantine I after AD 312, when it permanently replaced the aureus. |
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As the Roman occupation of Britain was coming to an end, Constantine III withdrew the remains of the army, in reaction to the barbarian invasion of Europe. |
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Constantine granted some clemency, but strongly encouraged his suicide. |
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In its preface, he argued that Zosimus' picture of Constantine was superior to that offered by Eusebius and the Church historians, offered a more balanced view. |
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