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Alphabetical [« »] moors 9 mopsuestia 4 mora 2 moral 18 moralist 2 morality 5 morally 2 | Frequency [« »] 18 limits 18 lyons 18 masters 18 moral 18 mosque 18 neighbors 18 nephew | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances moral |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,3 | advocate of very severe moral principles. As a ruthless 2 2,3 | one of the most beautiful moral examples humanity has ever 3 2,5 | spell of his genius and high moral qualities, and literary 4 3,8 | Empire and to raise the moral standards of government 5 3,16| of spiritual ascension to moral perfection. This work became 6 4,1 | inculcate in them higher moral principles. Instead of the 7 4,1 | remained forever a simple moral and religious teaching, 8 5,7 | been made for raising the moral, material, and intellectual 9 6,8 | that he possessed very high moral qualities, although in this 10 7,1 | property. Because of his lofty moral qualities, John deserved 11 7,1 | merciful, calm, and most moral Emperor was little but a 12 7,1 | lacked “perhaps, a little moral sense.”~ An historian contemporary 13 7,4 | this decree.~ Disorders and moral decline among the clergy 14 7,4 | measures for raising the moral standard of the clergy by 15 7,4 | raising the spiritual and moral standard of contemporary 16 8,4 | for Theodore.[33] But the moral significance of the victory 17 9,13| world to live through their moral strife in union with God. 18 9,18| known is Commentaries and Moral Judgments, usually known