Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 2,4 | regarded as a second Holy Land, and ~travelers to Jerusalem
2 I, 3,2 | themselves at work in the same ~land, it was difficult to avoid
3 I, 3,2 | the situation in the Holy Land deteriorated: ~two rivals,
4 I, 3,3 | attack Constantinople by land and sea. Outnumbered by
5 I, 4,1 | appeal from the Prince of the land, Rostislav, who asked that
6 I, 4,2 | sacked, and the whole Russian land ~was overrun, except the
7 I, 4,3 | with the recovery of the land in the fourteenth century.
8 I, 4,3 | greatest religious house in the land. What the Monastery of the ~
9 I, 4,3 | communities would form, fresh ~land would be cleared for agriculture.
10 I, 5,2 | Society of Jesus in the land in 1564, pressure on the ~
11 I, 6,1 | At the same time as the land of Russia, the Russian Church
12 I, 6,1 | attack on the ~ownership of land by monasteries (about a
13 I, 6,1 | monasteries (about a third of the land in Russia belonged to monasteries
14 I, 6,1 | therefore they must own land. Monks (so they argued)
15 I, 6,2 | Time of Troubles, when the land was divided against itself
16 I, 6,3 | revival spread across the land. Existing houses ~were reinvigorated,
17 I, 7,10| Greek diocese of New Zea-~land. ~ Besides these Asian Orthodox
18 II, 1,3 | Orthodox~love of the Holy Land: nothing could exceed the
19 II, 5,1 | churches throughout the~land; who has been present at
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