Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | the Christian Empire of ~Byzantium. ~ ~ 8~
2 I, 2 | Byzantium: The Church of the Seven
3 I, 2,1 | site of the Greek city of Byzantium, he built a new capital,
4 I, 2,2 | bishops, which the Church of Byzantium and the west regarded as
5 I, 2,2 | meeting of the sixth Council, Byzantium was faced with a ~sudden
6 I, 2,2 | Moss, in Baynes and Moss, ~Byzantium: An Introduction, Oxford,
7 I, 2,2 | without rival. Henceforward Byzantium was never free for ~very
8 I, 2,4 | Not without reason has Byzantium been called .the icon of
9 I, 2,4 | in the religious life of Byzantium, as it has done in that ~
10 I, 2,4 | danger of forgetting that Byzantium ~was an icon and symbol,
11 I, 2,4 | the Christian polity of Byzantium was the Emperor, who was
12 I, 2,4 | representative on earth. If Byzantium was an icon of the heavenly
13 I, 2,4 | in church. ~ The life of Byzantium formed a unified whole,
14 I, 2,4 | it is not just to accuse Byzantium of Caesaro-Papism, of subor-~
15 I, 2,4 | government and in its daily life. Byzantium ~in fact was nothing less
16 I, 2,4 | identifying the earthly kingdom of Byzantium with the Kingdom of God,
17 I, 2,4 | God.s people. Certainly Byzantium fell far short of the high
18 I, 2,4 | all the shortcomings of Byzantium can always be discerned
19 I, 3 | Byzantium: The Great Schism~.We are
20 I, 3,1 | difficult. ~ Cut off from Byzantium, the west proceeded to set
21 I, 3,1 | recognition from the ruler at Byzantium, but without success; for
22 I, 3,1 | and after 600, although Byzantium still called itself the
23 I, 3,1 | 864 a .Roman. Emperor at Byzantium, Mi-~chael III, even called
24 I, 3,1 | were not prepared to ~copy Byzantium, but sought to create a
25 I, 3,1 | life of the Church. ~In Byzantium there were many educated
26 I, 3,1 | power only in the west, Byzantium raised no objections. The
27 I, 3,1 | mediator ~between Germany and Byzantium. ~ It was not until after
28 I, 3,2 | involved in the dispute. Byzantium ~and the west (chiefly the
29 I, 3,2 | less inde-~pendence than Byzantium, Boris accepted this decision.
30 I, 3,2 | dispossessed Emperor of Byzantium, to turn aside to Constantinople
31 I, 3,3 | recovered their capital. Byzantium survived for two centuries ~
32 I, 3,3 | understanding the Christian life. Byzantium continued to live in a Patristic
33 I, 3,3 | universe of discourse.. ~ Byzantium on its side also contributed
34 I, 3,3 | a dispute which arose at Byzantium in the middle of the fourteenth
35 I, 3,3 | For the Hesychasts of Byzantium, the culmination of mystical
36 I, 3,3 | Into the closed world of Byzantium,. wrote Dom Gregory Dix, .
37 I, 3,3 | XI, the last Emperor of Byzantium and the ~eightieth in succession
38 I, 4,1 | carried with them as they left Byzantium for the unknown ~north.
39 I, 4,1 | the Christian culture of Byzantium was presented ~ 39~to the
40 I, 4,1 | predominantly Latin. ~ ~ Byzantium conferred two gifts upon
41 I, 4,1 | missionaries brought with them from Byzantium. The ~Slavs were Christianized
42 I, 4,1 | the Slavs bor-~rowed from Byzantium they were able to make their
43 I, 4,2 | Christian infiltration from Byzantium, Bulgaria, and Scandinavia,
44 I, 4,2 | was very little used. (In Byzantium the death penalty existed,
45 I, 4,2 | In Kievan Russia, as in Byzantium and the medieval west, monasteries
46 I, 4,2 | Metropolitan ~came from Byzantium, the Russian Church continues
47 I, 4,2 | relations not only with Byzantium but with western Europe,
48 I, 4,2 | spiritual inheritance of Byzantium. In 1237 Kievan Russia was
49 I, 4,3 | the Hesychast movement in Byzantium. At any rate some of the
50 I, 4,3 | they had taken over from ~Byzantium. Icon painting flourished
51 I, 4,3 | was now called to take Byzantium.s place as protector of
52 I, 5,1 | exactly as the autocrats of Byzantium had formerly done. The action
53 I, 5,1 | they had taken over from Byzantium, but they had little oppor-~
54 I, 6,1 | to be the successors of Byzantium. ~ At the same time as the
55 I, 6,1 | of Moscow as successor of Byzantium was assisted by a marriage.
56 I, 6,1 | establish a ~dynastic link with Byzantium. The Grand Duke of Moscow
57 I, 6,1 | double-headed ~eagle of Byzantium as his State emblem. Men
58 I, 6,1 | Quoted in Baynes and Moss, Byzantium: an Introduc-~tion, p. 385). ~ ~
59 I, 6,1 | the Tsar: the ~Emperor of Byzantium once acted as champion and
60 I, 6,1 | form of ~sanctity found in Byzantium, but particularly prominent
61 I, 6,2 | of the ~Mother Church of Byzantium from which they had received
62 I, 6,2 | the same in Russia as in Byzantium . a dyarchy or symphony
63 I, 6,3 | not to the teachings of Byzantium and ancient ~Russia, but
64 I, 6,3 | Orthodoxy has in common with Byzantium and the universal Orthodox
65 I, 7,6 | theology, as in the days of Byzantium when theologi-~cal scholarship
66 I, 7,10| conversion, will realize that Byzantium can claim missionary achievements
67 II, 3,1 | peoples — and especially of Byzantium and Russia — is this power~
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