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mamluks 6
mammon 1
mamun 12
man 125
manage 5
managed 5
management 1
Frequency    [«  »]
127 historical
126 god
126 order
125 man
125 old
125 various
125 whole
A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine empire

IntraText - Concordances

man

    Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,1 | strong desire for power, a man who sacrificed everything 2 2,1 | For in the case of this man of genius, whose ambitions 3 2,1 | non-religiousness; such a man is essentially irreligious [ 4 2,1 | actions of this inconsistent man would be all in vain; there 5 2,1 | religious situation. Such a man was Constantine. He was 6 2,1 | of our times, that every man may have freedom in the 7 2,1 | right of immunity). Any man could bequeath his property 8 2,1 | to episcopal courts. Any man had the right, if his opponent 9 2,2 | of his undertaking, the man who in the second half of 10 2,2 | basilica: An aged blind man led by a child approached 11 2,2 | called him an irreligious man, an atheist, and an apostate. 12 2,2 | not cure thee.” The aged man answered, “I thank God for 13 2,2 | having been ended, every man could follow his chosen 14 2,2 | procession it would be, like a man seeing visions in a dream, 15 2,2 | is too inaccessible for man. The sun of the physical 16 2,3 | issued a decree granting each man “the freedom of worshiping 17 2,3 | was taken by Nectarius, a man of the world, one of limited 18 2,3 | world-city as Antioch the common man still spoke Aramaic, i.e., 19 2,3 | not ashamed to honor the man who had devastated the Greek 20 2,3 | came into the hands of a man unusually accomplished in 21 2,4 | Jesus Christ is both God and man. But this decision fell 22 2,4 | Christ,” the “Mother of a man.”~ Nestoriuspersecutions 23 2,5 | years, became a colonus, a man attached to the soil, but 24 2,5 | contemporaries more than any other man of the period. Among his 25 3,5 | beyond the powers of any one man. There was no one central 26 3,8 | It is impossible for a man, when he has come into the 27 3,8 | horses, and not a single man spoke up against it, for 28 3,15| and Albanian origin. The man who ventured to advance 29 3,16| composed by one and the same man. Only after a careful comparative 30 3,16| settled in Constantinople, a man of limited poetical ability, 31 4,1 | because of the heavy losses in man power and the exceedingly 32 4,1 | the people about them. The man who unified the Arabs and 33 4,1 | the complete dependence of man upon God and a blind resignation 34 4,4 | need of an able, energetic man who could save it from inevitable 35 4,4 | inevitable ruin. Such a man appeared in the person of 36 4,4 | theme of Anatolici, Leo, a man with a very wide following. 37 5,1 | that only an emperor, a man, could be the official lawgiver, 38 5,3 | leave unpunished the strong man guilty of offense … They 39 5,5 | I have found in you a man after my own heart who carries 40 5,6 | conception of the medieval man the Roman Empire was a single 41 5,7 | in the members,”[115] “a man who was destined to restore 42 5,8 | the reign of Michael II a man named Euphemius organized 43 5,8 | neutral and indifferent, and a man who “followed the path of 44 5,8 | iconoclastic emperor, was a man well versed in theological 45 5,8 | Constantinople, the most enlightened man of that period, who was 46 5,8 | layman, the most learned man of the period. Two parties 47 5,8 | periods has been left by a man who spent all his life in 48 5,8 | enrich their knowledge. A man of inclusive scientific 49 5,8 | 191] As the most learned man of his time, he did not 50 5,8 | magician. Another distinguished man was Leo, a remarkable mathematician 51 6,2 | said to him, ‘There is a man of such and such a countenance 52 6,7 | legates exclaimed, “If any man refuse to recognize Photius 53 6,8 | He was a highly educated man who knew much, read extensively, 54 7,1 | was the biography of the man in whom the population of 55 7,1 | a real cry of a drowning man who already was uncertain 56 7,1 | sources is a most celebrated man, Robert the Devil, Duke 57 7,1 | soldier and a religious-minded man, who wished in this expedition 58 7,1 | leader and a deeply religious man. Finally, Bohemond of Tarentum, 59 7,1 | course, Alexius was not a man humbly to pick up what the 60 7,1 | patriot and learned literary man of the nineteenth century ( 61 7,1 | who was a good‑natured man, treated them very well.” 62 7,1 | acclamations, deserted him as a man who had not kept his promises, 63 7,2 | Philadelphia in Asia Minor, a man of low birth, who was married 64 7,2 | desire to be “forever a man (i.e., vassal) of the Roman 65 7,2 | but also the policy of a man absorbed in the illusive 66 7,3 | more, he resembled a young man by his powerful energy, 67 7,3 | it known to you that no man there was of such sturdy 68 7,3 | to elect as emperor that man who, in their opinion, could 69 7,3 | of the emperor arose. One man seemed destined to occupy 70 7,4 | judges of matters of God and man.” This opinion was supported 71 7,4 | concern body and soul (of man) while the power and activity 72 7,4 | monk Euthymius Zigabenus, a man skilled in grammatical knowledge 73 7,4 | processes to which any food that man takes is subject, or not 74 7,4 | they eat and drink every man under his vine and his fig 75 7,4 | was not only an educated man who was fond of literature 76 7,4 | there will come either a man of learning or an admirer 77 7,4 | his life; he depicted a man of the twelfth century living 78 7,4 | has shown in life no one man, either formerly or now, 79 7,4 | year 1089 that he was “a man skillful in books and learning, 80 7,4 | received irony from the first man he meets; “Eat thy writings 81 8,2 | was Theodore Lascaris, a man about thirty years old, 82 8,6 | a decisive and energetic man. This man appeared in the 83 8,6 | and energetic man. This man appeared in the person of 84 8,7 | advantage over John Vatatzes, a man of no very noble origin, 85 8,9 | him a wonderful and happy man because he did not resort 86 8,9 | Europe, John of Brienne, a man of eighty. Thus Asen’s first 87 8,10| modern times.”[70] He was “a man of creative and daring genius.”[ 88 8,14| letter merely “the noble man Theodore Lascaris” (nobilt 89 8,16| imagine Blemmydes to be such a man from his political treatise.”[ 90 8,17| protection of a more powerful man, passed from Roman times 91 8,17| to beneficiarius, i.e. a man granted land on condition 92 8,17| as “favor, benefit.”~ The man who asked for and received 93 8,17| pronoia” of it. Therefore the man who received such a grant 94 8,17| horses, and not a single man spoke against it, for all 95 8,17| their own military forces. A man who received a pronoia upon 96 9,4 | the island of Euboea, a man in condemnation of illegal 97 9,6 | Russian chronicle, no single man was left alive.[140]~ Venice 98 9,7 | not yet reached the age of man, I was encompassed by a 99 9,7 | the fifteenth century. A man of extraordinary valor and 100 9,7 | dangerous adventures. As a young man, he had set out to the East, 101 9,8 | Plethon, “the most learned man of his age,” and Nicholas 102 9,8 | Athenian friend George, a young man very well versed in Latin 103 9,9 | letters calls the Emperor a man “of pious and lofty spirit ( 104 9,9 | to acknowledging him as a man of genius.[200] The desire 105 9,9 | groans in the palace! Even a man of wood or stone could not 106 9,9 | considers himself a learned man.[232]~ ~A far-off Georgian 107 9,11| Beccus (Veccus), “a wise man, master of eloquence and 108 9,12| restoration of the Empire. A man of little scholarship, Arsenius 109 9,13| fourteenth century and the man who best reduced to a system 110 9,13| Palamas, a well-educated man and an able writer, a sworn 111 9,18| was a very well-educated man. Owing to his high official 112 9,18| remarked: “Essentially a man of affairs — and this constitutes 113 9,18| of literature.”[353] “A man of affairsmeans that Phrantzes 114 9,18| the sources, Beccus was a man of conspicuous intellect 115 9,18| century called him “a clever man, master of eloquence and 116 9,18| adversary of John Beccus, a man, to quote a contemporary 117 9,18| thoroughly the nature of man himself as the system of 118 9,18| of the universe of which man forms part. Plethon also 119 9,18| fourteenth century. This man of learning and distinguished 120 9,18| done. His greatness as a man and his importance in the 121 9,18| estimate adequately a great man in a great cultural epoch.~ 122 9,19| the West, and the thinking man in the West breathed more 123 9,19| deorum) calls Barlaam a man “with a small body but enormous 124 9,19| repulsive appearance of this “man of such bestial manners 125 9,19| West, and Bessarion was a man of first importance in the


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