Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,Intro | of Constantinople to the Turks in 1453 the Principality
2 I, 3,2 | Antioch was ~captured from the Turks in 1098, Jerusalem in 1099:
3 I, 3,3 | only hope of defeating the Turks lay in help from the west.
4 I, 3,3 | received. On 7 April 1453 the ~Turks began to attack Constantinople
5 I, 3,3 | day the city fell to the ~Turks, and the most glorious church
6 I, 4,3 | Byzantine Empire fell to the Turks. The new ~Russia which took
7 I, 5,1 | was made less hard by the Turks themselves, who treated ~
8 I, 5,1 | Patri-~archate under the Turks: everything was for sale. ~
9 I, 5,1 | Patriarchal throne, the Turks virtually sold it to ~the
10 I, 5,1 | the twentieth century, the Turks have on 105 occasions driven ~
11 I, 5,1 | panded as never before. The Turks looked on the Patriarch
12 I, 5,1 | gained freedom from the Turks found ~ 47~it impracticable
13 I, 5,1 | ernization. Orthodoxy under the Turks felt itself on the defensive.
14 I, 5,2 | perpetuate the Empire of the Turks! For they take their impost
15 I, 6,1 | ready been conquered by the Turks, while the rest was absorbed
16 I, 6,1 | punishment had been taken by the Turks. Moscow therefore had succeeded
17 I, 7,10 | Bolsheviks, as under the Turks, open missionary work is ~
18 II, 2,4 | avoid the notice of the Turks there was usually no official
19 II, 3,1 | under the Mongols, the Turks, or the communists — it
20 II, 6,2 | were slaughtered by the Turks in a series of unprovoked~
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