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Alphabetical    [«  »]
lest 4
let 19
letter 95
letters 116
letting 1
lettres 1
levant 5
Frequency    [«  »]
117 danger
116 already
116 arabian
116 letters
116 now
114 complete
114 greece
A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine empire

IntraText - Concordances

letters

    Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,2 | later life in one of his letters he “recalled with great 2 2,2 | decree, preserved in the letters of Julian. It stated that “ 3 2,2 | difficulties. In one of his letters he wrote: “I need many to 4 2,3 | based in part on the Greek letters, and translated the Bible 5 2,5 | collection of orations and letters. This collection constitutes 6 2,5 | and more than two hundred letters, written mainly during his 7 2,5 | record in ineffaceable letters the most peaceful wars waged 8 2,5 | historical materials in 156 letters which reflect his brilliant 9 2,5 | wrote a large number of letters and sermons which the Greek 10 2,5 | of Hypatia in many of his letters. One source told how, “clothed 11 2,5 | is the collection of his letters, which in richness of content 12 2,5 | may be compared with the letters of Synesius of Cyrene.~ 13 2,5 | appeal “To the King Sun;” his letters; his “Against the Christians,” 14 3,6 | church authority. In his letters to the bishop of Rome, Justinian 15 3,16| also displayed a taste for letters; he not only patronized 16 3,16| science and a collection of letters, he also wrote a history 17 4,2 | arrival to the city. In his letters from Cherson the pope complained 18 4,2 | Unfortunately Martin’s letters give little interesting 19 4,4 | and art.~With regard to letters and art, the period from 20 4,4 | large number of interesting letters.~ The influence and importance 21 5,4 | people who are ignorant of letters but “could at least read 22 5,8 | His large collection of letters of a religious-canonic and 23 5,8 | left also many sermons and letters. In two of his sermons he 24 5,8 | In connection with the letters exchanged between Theophilus 25 6,6 | exists. It appears from the letters exchanged by these two rulers 26 6,7 | deposed Ignatius. In their letters to the pope both Basil and 27 6,7 | intervention.”[77] These letters indicate a moment of apparent 28 6,7 | this victory, because the letters sent to him from Byzantium 29 6,7 | interesting collection of letters invaluable from the historical 30 6,7 | After the council several letters were exchanged with the 31 6,8 | all men of learning and letters; in his time “the imperial 32 6,8 | survived, some diplomatic letters, several sermons for Christian 33 6,8 | his valuable collection of letters, preserved in one of the 34 6,8 | valuable collection of over 150 letters. It contains messages written 35 6,8 | students. In one of his letters Psellus wrote: “We have 36 6,8 | number of orations, and many letters. The History of Psellus, 37 6,8 | for old Russian life and letters were profoundly affected 38 7,1 | Sylvester II. Among his letters is one “From the ruined 39 7,1 | the pope had written many letters, in which he exhorted his 40 7,1 | Apostolic throne.”~ In these letters the question was not only 41 7,1 | impression that in these letters it is a question rather 42 7,1 | Land. Moreover, all these letters were written before the 43 7,1 | explained in one of his letters the cause of his long silence 44 7,1 | undoubtedly wrong.~ In one of his letters, Alexiuscontemporary, 45 7,2 | Pope Innocent III in his letters to the Bulgarian King John ( 46 7,3 | slowly, for in one of his letters to Alexius the irritated 47 7,3 | union, and in one of his letters he even brought forward 48 7,3 | in speeches, poetry, and letters, which gives good information 49 7,4 | II and Honorius II; two letters exist addressed by John 50 7,4 | languages and most learned in letters, namely James, a Venetian, 51 7,4 | well as a great number of letters and some poetry, which give 52 7,4 | literary legacies are his letters and his book On the Errors 53 7,4 | the Latins. Almost all his letters were written between 1091 54 7,4 | the collection of his 107 letters, which in spite of their 55 7,4 | commentary in verse on his own letters which, letter after letter, 56 7,4 | The relation between his letters and Chiliads are so close 57 7,4 | prose,” that is, in Tzetzesletters. Another large work by John 58 7,4 | The situation of men of letters like Prodromus was at times 59 7,4 | and orator, the author of letters and of an astrological poem, 60 8,5 | structure. In his eulogistic letters to Theodore Lascaris, Michael 61 8,7 | history of the Despotat by the letters of John Apocaucus (Apokaukos), 62 8,7 | Chomatianos), whose works, the letters in particular, have great 63 8,7 | Byzantine basileus. One of the letters of Demetrius Chomatenus 64 8,7 | precious collection of the letters of the above-mentioned metropolitan 65 8,10| Vatatzes. In one of his letters Frederick stated that he 66 8,10| Orthodoxy; in one of his letters to Vatatzes which is preserved 67 8,13| upon him. In one of his letters he said: “The judgment of 68 8,16| future Emperor, who in his letters called him his teacher and 69 8,16| described, in one of his letters, the profound impression 70 8,16| school matters. In one of his letters concerning the pupils who 71 8,16| schools, and in one of his letters, he discusses the problem 72 8,16| the large collection of letters mentioned above (over two 73 8,16| the supposed author of the letters preserved in one of the 74 8,16| forty of his writingsletters, various canonical works, 75 8,16| on the basis of George’s letters to Emperors Frederick and 76 8,16| Cardinal Baronius thought these letters were addressed to Frederick 77 8,16| Michael Acominatus, whose letters give much information about 78 8,16| him. George’s interesting letters have reached us, and Michael 79 8,16| Michael Acominatus, in his letters, from teaching George and 80 8,16| style.[200] Besides the letters, George was the author of 81 8,16| more than 150 writings, letters in which various juridical 82 8,17| Assises of Jerusalem or the Letters of the Holy Sepulchre (Lettres 83 9,2 | clearly felt in Manuel’s letters. Having described famine, 84 9,7 | disappointed. In one of his letters from London, Manuel wrote: “ 85 9,7 | this subject comes from his letters. Those which refer to the 86 9,7 | France, there are no imperial letters.~ But some interesting records 87 9,7 | are two very interesting letters addressed by Manuel to the 88 9,9 | the throne, in one of his letters calls the Emperor a man “ 89 9,9 | knights left many epistles and letters portraying the whole horror 90 9,9 | Sennacherib.”[234] In many letters the ruin of Constantinople 91 9,9 | Piccolomini gave in one of his letters an excellent and true picture 92 9,18| Thessalonica (Salonica) in art and letters.[336]~ In a word, at the 93 9,18| Andronicus the Elder admired letters and art and was a patron 94 9,18| collection of important letters to many prominent men of 95 9,18| exist about 109 essays and letters from the pen of Manuel.[ 96 9,18| written in hexameter, and some letters, he was the author of a 97 9,18| correspondence. Most of his letters are as yet unpublished; 98 9,18| may be noted Manuel II (32 letters), John Cantacuzene, with 99 9,18| very friendly terms (11 letters), and a great many other 100 9,18| epoch.[371]~ Until all his letters are available for study 101 9,18| from some specimens of his letters already published.[373]~ 102 9,18| especially orations and letters, are preserved in several 103 9,18| French scholar Guilland his letters are written in an easy and 104 9,18| Italian general and patron of letters, of the famous family of 105 9,18| left a collection of 172 letters. In his philosophical essays 106 9,18| to Life, as well as his letters on Peloponnesian affairs 107 9,18| of more than 100 of his letters portrays his intellectual 108 9,18| writers and his collected letters afford interesting material, 109 9,18| writings, poetry and numerous letters to eminent contemporaries110 9,18| Metochites also left some letters; only four of them exist, 111 9,18| all likelihood his other letters were destroyed by his enemies.[ 112 9,18| ancient writers, orations, and letters, and whose literary work 113 9,19| original. In one of his letters Petrarca spoke of Barlaam 114 9,19| customs.”[455] In one of his letters to Boccaccio, Petrarca wrote 115 9,19| fourteenth century, in one of his letters, Petrarca spoke of a certain 116 9,19| translation of Plato), and letters, do not justify attributing


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