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Alphabetical [« »] move 9 moved 13 movement 149 movements 23 movements- 1 mover 1 moves 1 | Frequency [« »] 23 milan 23 mistra 23 mongol 23 movements 23 naturally 23 opportunity 23 past | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances movements |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,2 | naturally, the new dogmatical movements originated in Alexandria 2 2,2 | caused many new similar movements and complications. In the 3 2,3 | forms. These disquieting movements were felt particularly in 4 2,3 | development caused new religious movements, which in the fifth century 5 2,4 | by the development of new movements in opposition to Nestorianism. 6 2,5 | orthodox and the Monophysitic movements were unwilling to make any 7 2,5 | connected with the religious movements. The Germanic, or, to be 8 2,5 | general cultural and literary movements of this epoch were two other 9 2,5 | qualities, and literary movements of subsequent periods borrowed 10 3,6 | followers of minor heretical movements were centered primarily 11 5,5 | wavered between the two movements could now, on the basis 12 6 | his time the separatist movements in Asia Minor were suppressed; 13 6,2 | start a series of offensive movements, which were particularly 14 6,8 | called forth the crusade movements in the West.~ During this 15 7,1 | standpoint of the religious movements of the Middle Ages. Two 16 7,4 | dogmatic errors and heretic movements of their time. One side 17 7,4 | one of the most momentous movements in human history she surely 18 8,16| understanding the philosophical movements in Byzantium of the thirteenth 19 8,16| matter of fact, these three movements, in Italy, Nicaea, and Epirus, 20 9,10| of view of the religious movements in the internal life of 21 9,12| extended to politics and social movements. For example, the zealots 22 9,18| western European mystic movements, deserves an honorable place 23 9,18| between the two philosophical movements, Aristotelian and Platonic,