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Alphabetical    [«  »]
armenians 9
armeno-slavic 1
armeno-slavonic 1
armies 19
armiger 1
arming 1
armistice 1
Frequency    [«  »]
19 accomplished
19 action
19 antiquity
19 armies
19 aspect
19 attained
19 blinded
A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine empire

IntraText - Concordances

armies

   Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,1| divine apparition and to armies marching in heaven, which 2 4,1| then resist the Byzantine armies? Who could menace the Empire?”[ 3 4,1| both sides. In reality, the armies of the two contending sides 4 4,1| resistance to the Arabian armies, which repaid this opposition 5 6,2| appeared in the Greek and Arab armies. The Greek domesticus John 6 6,2| spirit into the imperial armies, and led them victorious 7 6,2| became filled with Roman armies; Syria and Phoenicia were 8 6,3| But in 918 the Bulgarian armies were occupied in Serbia.[ 9 6,7| easily organize and subsidize armies composed of their dependents, 10 7,1| powerful and well‑organized armies.~ The popes replied very 11 7,1| did not dream of crusading armies; he wanted no crusade, but 12 7,1| At the head of the three armies stood the following men: 13 7,1| of the two north French armies. At the head of the south 14 7,1| Italy.” All the crusading armies pursued their own aims; 15 7,1| One part of the crusading armies went to Constantinople by 16 7,1| alarm for the crusading armies which were approaching his 17 7,1| succession of reports that the armies of the Franks had appeared 18 7,1| Thoros. Two of Manuel’s armies sent against Thoros failed. 19 9,3| the papal forces, and the armies of the Serbs and Bulgars.


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