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Alphabetical    [«  »]
greek-byzantine 1
greek-slavs 2
greek-speaking 1
greeks 150
green 3
greens 8
greet 1
Frequency    [«  »]
152 view
150 art
150 christians
150 greeks
150 middle
150 sent
149 movement
A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine empire

IntraText - Concordances

greeks

    Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,5 | all the historians were Greeks. Patristic literature had 2 2,5 | Assyrians, Hebrews, Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans and in its main 3 3,6 | was unbearable to these Greeks, and Chosroes determined 4 3,9 | of a new industry for the Greeks. They made rapid progress. 5 3,12| of the sixth century the Greeks were completely destroyed 6 3,15| with deep sympathy for the Greeks who had raised the banner 7 3,15| the graves of the ancient Greeks. The immortal works of the 8 3,15| the people whom we call Greeks at present and whose genealogy, 9 3,15| did not exterminate the Greeks completely. The final blow 10 3,15| complete extermination of the Greeks. Moreover, various sources 11 4,1 | mentioned in the Koran. “The Greeks have been overcome by the 12 4,1 | The districts where the Greeks were in the great majority 13 5,2 | satisfactory to neither Greeks nor Arabs, for the Greeks 14 5,2 | Greeks nor Arabs, for the Greeks did not gain Jerusalem and 15 5,6 | Charlesdaughter, whom the Greeks called Eruthro, and Constantine, 16 5,7 | highly. For instance, the Greeks recognize him “as one of 17 6,2 | sometimes on the side of the Greeks and sometimes on the side 18 6,2 | times as victorious as the Greeks. Neither side gained much 19 6,2 | which still belonged to the Greeks were of no importance in 20 6,2 | Saif-ad-Daulah, and although the Greeks had been beaten in several 21 6,2 | constant clashes between the Greeks and the Muslims in the west, 22 6,2 | authority of the Byzantine Greeks.”[27] This letter, of course, 23 6,3 | Bulgarian army defeated the Greeks in several battles. Greek 24 6,3 | emperor of the Bulgarians and Greeks.”~ In 923 or 924 the famous 25 6,3 | was too weak to resist the Greeks, and was soon conquered 26 6,4 | prisoners captured by the Greeks were put to death.~ Igor’ 27 6,4 | In the following year the Greeks and Russians negotiated 28 6,4 | in Constantinople and the Greeks had a quarrel, during which 29 6,6 | aware of the fact that the Greeks were prolonging the negotiations 30 6,7 | him as the “Emperor of the Greeks,” while the title of “Emperor 31 6,8 | Sviatoslav and his war with the Greeks.~ The monograph of John 32 7,1 | Dyrrachium passed again to the Greeks.~ It has been shown that 33 7,1 | Saracens in Sicily and the Greeks in southern Italy.” All 34 7,1 | accused Alexius and the Greeks of perfidy and disloyalty 35 7,1 | between the Latins and the Greeks; in their persons stood 36 7,1 | crusade and irritated at the Greeks, came, on his return journey 37 7,1 | and mean treachery of the Greeks and their detestable king ( 38 7,1 | they marched against the Greeks. At the same time Reginald 39 7,1 | Normans, “the Kingdom” of the Greeks. At least, a western medieval 40 7,1 | hostile to the Kingdom of the Greeks [regno Gre-corum infestus] 41 7,2 | Emperor had to fight against Greeks and Vlachs, and calls Peter 42 7,2 | from 1196 a threat to the Greeks and later to the Latins.” 43 7,2 | return the Holy Land to the Greeks. Isaac’s attitude toward 44 7,2 | of a crusade against the Greeks. Meanwhile, after the taking 45 7,3 | treacherously blinded by the Greeks by means of a concave mirror 46 7,3 | relations between the Latins and Greeks. In the city itself, meanwhile, 47 7,3 | Byzantium. Conflict between the Greeks and crusaders was unavoidable. 48 7,3 | Romanie), as the Latins and Greeks often called the Eastern 49 7,3 | lived in the mountains. The Greeks of Morea, at least the majority 50 7,3 | right nor power over the Greeks you seem to have imprudently 51 7,3 | Constantinople. In addition, the Greeks of the Latin Empire, despite 52 7,4 | which arose between the Greeks and crusaders were unfavorable 53 7,4 | third, most famous among Greeks and Latins above all others 54 7,4 | existing between the Latins and Greeks, and to find some means 55 7,4 | financial policy of Manuel. The Greeks of the islands of the Ionian 56 7,4 | in all the books of the Greeks, and they eat and drink 57 7,4 | was held; and at that time Greeks and Slavs, Italians, Spaniards ( 58 7,4 | west, reminding us of the Greeks in Italy in the early fifteenth 59 8,1 | various combinations: the Greeks struggled against the Frankish 60 8,1 | the Turks and Bulgars; the Greeks strove against the Greeks, 61 8,1 | Greeks strove against the Greeks, introducing in the form 62 8,2 | of the unification of the Greeks; therefore the history of 63 8,2 | successful. It seemed to the Greeks of Asia Minor that all was 64 8,2 | secret relations of the Greeks with King Kalojan prepared 65 8,2 | the Empire of Nicaea. The Greeks of Macedonia and Thrace, 66 8,2 | Romaioctonus, Romaioktonos). The Greeks surnamed him “Dog-John” ( 67 8,2 | and hopes of the European Greeks. In the treaty concluded 68 8,4 | vigor the hearts of the Greeks, not only the Asiatics, 69 8,5 | Latin Empire.~ But if the Greeks rejoiced in Theodore’s victory, 70 8,5 | of Franks and well-armed Greeks.[37]~ The victory over the 71 8,5 | help against us … All the Greeks began to murmur against 72 8,5 | of his victory over the Greeks, who “with such insolence 73 8,5 | and beloved even by the Greeks, and a Byzantine chronicler 74 8,5 | Latinspossibly for the Greeks likewise — since his strong 75 8,5 | attention of the European Greeks. He had laid the foundation 76 8,9 | Bulgars, but also among the Greeks, A Greek historian of the 77 8,9 | remained in the hands of the Greeks.~ In an inscription on a 78 8,9 | the European and Asiatic Greeks, and opened the way to the 79 8,10| Palermo, where had lived the Greeks, later the Arabs, and then 80 8,10| make an “alliance with the Greeks, deadly enemies both of 81 8,10| with us, and especially the Greeks, our close friends… [The 82 8,10| most pious and orthodox Greeks most impious and heretics.”[ 83 8,12| him as “the Father of the Greeks.”[93]~ ~ 84 8,13| 95] Believing that the Greeks had to rely on their own 85 8,13| was made. Bulgarians and Greeks received their former frontiers, 86 8,13| Cumans, and Slavs, as well as Greeks, fought in Michael’s army. 87 8,13| that Turks fought against Greeks on Greek soil, and on this 88 8,13| understanding with the schismatic Greeks would evoke the severe censure 89 8,13| of Constantinople by the Greeks exclaimed: “What do I hear! 90 8,13| recovery of the city by the Greeks in 1261.”[117] Professor 91 8,14| problem of the union with the Greeks became the keystone of all 92 8,14| of the lawlessness of the Greeks, “who were producing nausea 93 8,14| overlordship of the pope. But the Greeks wished neither subordination 94 8,14| Morosini and, leading the Greeks, Nicholas Mesarites. The 95 8,14| Nicholas Mesarites. The Greeks of the Latin Empire began 96 8,14| Nicaea, but also for the Greeks of the Latin Empire.~ The 97 8,14| Providence in punishing the Greeks for their refusal to accept 98 8,14| be desirable now for the Greeks to become obedient subjects 99 8,14| loaded with the curses of the Greeks gathered there, who shouted: “ 100 8,14| Catholic delegates cried to the Greeks: “You are also heretics!”[ 101 8,15| the hands of the Nicene Greeks and filled the imperial 102 8,16| yoke the medieval educated Greeks in general, and the Greeks 103 8,16| Greeks in general, and the Greeks of the thirteenth century 104 8,16| Western romances move the Greeks to produce works impregnated 105 8,16| was never dead there… The Greeks already possessed, owing 106 9,2 | Villehardouin, captured by the Greeks in the battle of Castoria, 107 9,3 | binding them, along with the Greeks, to fight against the Genoese 108 9,3 | help him reconquer from the Greeks. The Norman claims to Byzantium 109 9,4 | astounding theory that the Greeks had been completely exterminated 110 9,5 | destroy the power of the Greeks and replace it by that of 111 9,5 | to exert power over the Greeks, not as emperor of the Romans, 112 9,5 | as tsar of the Serbs and Greeks would be legal only if sanctioned 113 9,6 | took Callipolis from the Greeks.”[128]~ At that time the 114 9,6 | official wrote that the Greeks of Constantinople, wishing 115 9,6 | greatTsar of the Serbs and Greeks,” Dushan, was also seeking 116 9,7 | Villehardouin, was captured by the Greeks and gave as ransom three 117 9,7 | was attracting educated Greeks, scholars, sophists, and 118 9,7 | population of the Peloponnesus: Greeks (in Mazaris, Lacedaemonians 119 9,8 | captivity a great number of Greeks. The horrified Despot Constantine 120 9,9 | defenders of Constantinople, the Greeks and some Latins, particularly 121 9,9 | without love and pity for the Greeks. Finally, the fourth Greek 122 9,9 | as a punishment for the Greekssecession from the Catholic 123 9,9 | the conflicts between the Greeks and Turks during the siege, 124 9,9 | indescribable joy of the Greeks and Italians. For a moment 125 9,9 | devastation. A great multitude of Greeks took refuge in St. Sophia, 126 9,9 | murdered and insulted the Greeks who were hiding there, without 127 9,9 | nameless grave which the humble Greeks revere as that of Constantine. 128 9,9 | the extreme ruin of the Greeks, the infamy of the Latins; 129 9,11| peaceful union with the Greeks, which would put an end 130 9,11| of Constantinople by the Greeks in 1261 was a heavy blow 131 9,14| that time, the schismatic Greeks were more repulsive than 132 9,14| Turks are enemies, but the Greeks are schismatics and worse 133 9,14| schism and the errors of the Greeks.” At the same time, however, 134 9,15| Greek problem. The Byzantine Greeks, representatives of true 135 9,15| a long time. Not all the Greeks were willing to recognize 136 9,15| Maria del Fiore. Several Greeks, however, with Mark of Ephesus 137 9,16| religious institutions of the Greeks were preserved under the 138 9,16| while all the rest of the Greeks were obliged to pay an annual 139 9,17| landlords. Quite a number of Greeks became powerful landowners 140 9,18| western Europe, and urge the Greeks and Latins to unite their 141 9,18| Slavs or of the Byzantine Greeks in the fourteenth century 142 9,19| general and by the Byzantine Greeks in particular, it is important 143 9,19| was called forth by the Greeks who fled from Byzantium 144 9,19| influence of the Byzantine Greeks upon the Renaissance. Considering 145 9,19| latter first, what sort of Greeks were those whose names are 146 9,19| identified them, or because the Greeks call Constantinople the 147 9,19| humanistic movement of these Greeks who were in origin not Byzantines, 148 9,19| and seventh centuries many Greeks were forced to leave their 149 9,19| and the best Latin of the Greeks” (latinorum graecissimus, 150 9,19| and more dangerous, the Greeks emigrated in large numbers


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