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Alphabetical [« »] christopher 2 chronicle 59 chronicler 38 chroniclers 18 chronicles 10 chronicon 2 chronogra-phies 1 | Frequency [« »] 18 blood 18 castle 18 catalans 18 chroniclers 18 confined 18 contributed 18 correct | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances chroniclers |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,5 | Getae and Scythians, the chroniclers of that period were not 2 3,16| sixth century also had its chroniclers. Justinian’s epoch was still 3 3,16| between the historians and chroniclers was occupied by Hesychius 4 4,1 | indications which historians and chroniclers supply. The paramount significance 5 4,1 | other point in Italy. The chroniclers explain the Emperor’s departure 6 4,4 | of occasional remarks of chroniclers and especially of the Latin 7 4,4 | Byzantine period.[96]~ Among the chroniclers were John of Antioch and 8 5,8 | no historians, though the chroniclers of this period have left 9 5,8 | usual with other Byzantine chroniclers. The work of Theophanes 10 5,8 | favorite source of subsequent chroniclers. The Latin translation of 11 6,8 | been mentioned.~ Among the chroniclers of this period was the anonymous 12 6,8 | unsolved.[169]~ The group of chroniclers of the tenth century are 13 7,4 | antiquity, and, finally, chroniclers, left works which give evidence 14 8,7 | impression on the West, where the chroniclers painted in the very darkest 15 9,6 | From Byzantium, as western chroniclers narrated, the Genoese galleys 16 9,7 | French, and contemporary chroniclers who note many details concerning 17 9,7 | evident; both historians and chroniclers of the time recognized the 18 9,18| historians, produced almost no chroniclers. In the fourteenth century