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Alphabetical [« »] ar 1 arab 21 arabia 17 arabian 116 arabians 1 arabic 27 arabicized 1 | Frequency [« »] 117 course 117 danger 116 already 116 arabian 116 letters 116 now 114 complete | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances arabian |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,5| existed until the Persian and Arabian conquests of the seventh 2 4,1| invasion freed the marauding Arabian tribes from the ties of 3 4,1| Semitic origin, occupied the Arabian peninsula and the Syrian 4 4,1| genuine representatives of the Arabian race and the true bearers 5 4,1| into collision with the Arabian tribes on its eastern Syrian 6 4,1| Hermitage in Leningrad.~ Two Arabian dynasties stand out very 7 4,1| and Palestine. The second Arabian dynasty, the Lakhmids, centered 8 4,1| within the confines of the Arabian peninsula and the Syrian 9 4,1| visited by merchants from all Arabian tribes. Some legends affirm 10 4,1| prevailed among certain Arabian tribes of burying alive 11 4,1| in Mesopotamia and in the Arabian provinces along the Euphrates 12 4,1| 31-36]).~ ~Causes of the Arabian conquest in the seventh 13 4,1| Eutychius, the Christian Arabian historian of the tenth century, 14 4,1| and Beladsori, another Arabian historian of the ninth century, 15 4,1| Arabic descent, and that the Arabian conquerors met in the subjected 16 4,1| resistance to the fresh Arabian forces.~ In Egypt there 17 4,1| previous to the period of the Arabian conquests became practically 18 4,1| factor which facilitated the Arabian conquest the inadequate 19 4,1| list of primary causes for Arabian success includes religious 20 4,1| scholars set the number of Arabian soldiers who took part in 21 4,1| their subjection.”[49]~ ~Arabian conquests up to the early 22 4,1| River Yarmuk led to the Arabian conquest of the entire province 23 4,1| the first period of the Arabian conquests in Asia. At the 24 4,1| end of the thirties the Arabian chief Amr appeared at the 25 4,1| Africa, were already under Arabian sway.~ The conquests, by 26 4,1| vessels to which the new Arabian provinces along the seashore 27 4,1| time of Constans II, the Arabian vessels of Muawiya began 28 4,1| were transported to the Arabian city of Damascus.~ The Arabian 29 4,1| Arabian city of Damascus.~ The Arabian conquests of the seventh 30 4,1| to become subjects of the Arabian conquerors. It may be said 31 4,1| the repercussions of the Arabian conquests, it is extremely 32 4,1| Empire under pressure of Arabian invasions by land and sea, 33 4,1| paramount significance of the Arabian danger in causing congestion 34 4,1| fully proved.[56]~ Further Arabian conquests in North Africa 35 4,1| Constantine IV (668-85), when the Arabian fleet crossed the Aegean 36 4,1| All the attempts of the Arabian vessels to capture Constantinople 37 4,1| occurred on the eastern Arabian border. The mountains of 38 4,1| this district. After the Arabian conquest of Syria the Mardaites 39 4,1| protected Asia Minor from Arabian irruptions. By the peace 40 4,1| Their removal from the Arabian border unquestionably strengthened 41 4,1| facilitated the subsequent Arabian offensive movement into 42 4,1| Constantinople in the East, the Arabian army began its westward 43 4,1| of the Christians to the Arabian rulers. Jerusalem, as one 44 4,1| during the early years of the Arabian sway.~ After the Arabian 45 4,1| Arabian sway.~ After the Arabian conquest the patriarchates 46 4,1| patriarchates still exist. The Arabian historian and geographer 47 4,1| Masudi, said that under the Arabian domination all four sacred 48 4,1| strong resistance to the Arabian armies, which repaid this 49 4,1| which they were left by the Arabian invasion, one still finds 50 4,1| propaganda. In fifty years the Arabian invasion undid all these 51 4,1| Constantinople changed radically. The Arabian conquest of the eastern 52 4,1| Byzantine provinces, frequent Arabian attacks on the provinces 53 4,1| successful expeditions of the Arabian fleet in the Mediterranean 54 4,1| inevitable approach of the Arabian menace from North Africa 55 4,3| torn from the Empire by the Arabian conquest, nevertheless took 56 4,3| further strengthening of the Arabian power in these provinces. 57 4,4| found in the works of the Arabian geographers Ibn-Khurdadhbah ( 58 4,4| The Persian, and later the Arabian, conquests of the seventh 59 4,4| from the newly constructed Arabian fleet, which was almost 60 4,4| as a defense against the Arabian fleet.~ A striking analogy 61 4,4| The Persian, and later the Arabian, conquest of the culturally 62 4,4| Egypt, and North Africa, the Arabian menace to Asia Minor, the 63 4,4| Sophronius, who lived through the Arabian siege of the sacred city 64 5,1| Syria, east of Cilicia. An Arabian source referred to Leo as “ 65 5,2| Justinian II, there was the Arabian menace in the East, which 66 5,2| critical in many respects.~ The Arabian forces on land passed through 67 5,2| Sea. At the head of the Arabian troops stood a distinguished 68 5,2| At the same time a strong Arabian fleet consisting of 1,800 69 5,2| caused severe damage in the Arabian fleet, while hunger and 70 5,2| siege, in the year 732, the Arabian advance from Spain into 71 5,2| 15] The problem of the Arabian struggle, then, was brilliantly 72 5,3| endangered by the sea raids of Arabian and Slavic pirates. Piracy 73 5,3| organization, which belongs to the Arabian geographer of the first 74 5,4| stated by historians that the Arabian caliph Yazid II issued a 75 5,4| within the boundaries of the Arabian caliphate. Two of these 76 5,8| sources, Nicephorus was of Arabian origin.[122] One of his 77 5,8| daughter of Nicephorus I, an Arabian; by one Armenian; and finally, 78 5,8| predominance and forced Arabian nationality into the background. 79 5,8| exaggerated words of the Arabian chronicle. Mutasim expected 80 5,8| effectively resisting the Arabian attacks with his own forces, 81 5,8| Crete, which was captured by Arabian emigrants from Spain, who 82 5,8| island had become subject to Arabian attacks, although these 83 5,8| conquest of Sicily, the Arabian fleet also began to raid 84 5,8| forties of the ninth century, Arabian pirates appeared at the 85 5,8| Syria, which was then under Arabian domination. He was minister 86 5,8| a palace in imitation of Arabian models. Certain evidence 87 6,2| influence of the Turks at the Arabian court, the defection of 88 6,2| Empire, exposed to incessant Arabian invasions, did not receive 89 6,2| detailed account of the Arabian raid of the city came from 90 6,2| achieved numerous victories in Arabian Armenia and occupied many 91 6,2| thus destroying the nest of Arabian pirates who had terrorized 92 6,2| suzerainty of the Empire.~ The Arabian historian of the eleventh 93 6,2| information given by the Christian Arabian historian, Yahya of Antioch, 94 6,2| persecuted. The contemporary Arabian historian, Yahya of Antioch, 95 6,2| nothing.”[36]~ When the Arabian caliph found himself greatly 96 6,3| army was engaged in the Arabian campaigns, appealed for 97 6,3| Simeon every year.~ After the Arabian siege and pillage of Thessalonica 98 6,6| primarily of the successful Arabian campaigns in Sicily and 99 6,6| appreciated the extent of the Arabian menace to Rome. In striving 100 6,6| between the two empires. The Arabian attacks on southern Italy, 101 6,6| Italy were made safe from Arabian attacks through the interference 102 6,7| found in the works of the Arabian geographer of the ninth 103 6,7| tenth century after the Arabian conquest of Sicily proper. 104 6,8| numerous in the ranks of the Arabian army on the eastern borders 105 6,8| points, as indicated in Arabian sources, were: (1) Romanus 106 6,8| messages written to the Arabian Emir of Crete, to Simeon 107 6,8| contains accounts of the Arabian, Bulgarian, and Russian 108 6,8| of Thessalonica, on the Arabian conquest of Thessalonica 109 6,8| between the Byzantine epic and Arabian and Turkish epics, and even 110 7,1| into their hands.~ These Arabian conquests were of the greatest 111 7,1| in view a statement of an Arabian historian of the eleventh 112 7,1| than two hundred years of Arabian rule in the island, a very 113 7,1| crusading movement came from an Arabian historian of the twelfth 114 7,4| Under Manuel also, an Arabian traveler, al-Harawy (or 115 8,2| First Ecumenical Council, an Arabian traveler of the twelfth 116 9,3| Beginning with the time of the Arabian power, Byzantium had established