Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 4,2 | The baptism of Russia: The Kiev period (988-1237).~ Photius
2 I, 4,2 | Oleg, who assumed power at Kiev ~(the chief Russian city
3 I, 4,2 | was certainly a ~church at Kiev in 945. The Russian Princess
4 I, 4,2 | from the hilltop ~above Kiev. .Angel.s trumpet and Gospel.
5 I, 4,2 | services. as in ~tenth-century Kiev. Other rulers in Kievan
6 I, 4,2 | the Byzantine law code at Kiev, he insisted on mitigating
7 I, 4,2 | Monastery of the Caves at ~Kiev. Founded around 105I by
8 I, 4,2 | and another a ~Syrian. ~ Kiev enjoyed relations not only
9 I, 4,2 | calendar were ven-~erated at Kiev; a prayer to the Holy Trinity
10 I, 4,2 | closer to the west in the Kiev period than at any other
11 I, 4,2 | by the Mongol invasions; Kiev was sacked, and the whole
12 I, 4,2 | countless ~human skulls. But if Kiev was destroyed, the Christianity
13 I, 4,2 | destroyed, the Christianity of Kiev remained a living memory: ~ ~
14 I, 4,3 | changed in outward appearance. Kiev never recov-~ered from the
15 I, 5,2 | in-~cluding the city of Kiev itself, became absorbed
16 I, 5,2 | including the Metropolitan of ~Kiev, Michael Ragoza, supported
17 I, 5,2 | Orthodox world; ~scholars from Kiev, traveling to Moscow at
18 I, 5,2 | Moghila, Metropolitan of Kiev from 1633 to 1647. To him
19 I, 6,3 | theological academy of Kiev, Paissy Velichkovsky (1722-
20 I, 6,3 | Vladimir, Metropolitan ~of Kiev, by the Bolsheviks. Persecution
21 II, 0,11| Mohammedans; the burning of Kiev by the Mongols; the~two
22 II, 3,1 | how Vladimir, Prince of Kiev, while~still a pagan, desired
23 II, 3,1 | than those Russians~from Kiev, a sense of God’s presence
|