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sixteen 1
sixteen-hundredth 1
sixteenth 12
sixth 111
sixties 3
sixty 9
sixty-five 1
Frequency    [«  »]
112 remained
111 chief
111 north
111 sixth
110 slavs
110 southern
110 succeeded
A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine empire

IntraText - Concordances

sixth

    Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,2 | Constantine to the Early Sixth Century~After the death 2 2,3 | in the early part of the sixth century, before Justinian’ 3 2,4 | late third century to the sixth decade of the fourth century. 4 2,4 | in the early part of the sixth century. This is an instance 5 2,5 | Balkan peninsula in the sixth century during the reign 6 2,5 | the late fifth and early sixth centuries the idea of a 7 2,5 | to one historian of the sixth century, one “needs the 8 2,5 | A Syriac source of the sixth century described the joy 9 2,5 | to the beginning of the sixth century are closely connected 10 2,5 | works appeared in the early sixth century under Anastasius 11 2,5 | whether Romanus lived in the sixth or in the early eighth century. 12 2,5 | finished work of Romanus in the sixth century seems to indicate 13 2,5 | this unusual poet in the sixth century without some previous 14 2,5 | Latin historians of the sixth century, Cassiodorus and 15 2,5 | century and early part of the sixth, wrote The New History, 16 2,5 | and the beginning of the sixth centuries. But in the curriculum 17 2,5 | time from the fourth to the sixth centuries is one when various 18 2,5 | throughout the fourth, fifth, and sixth centuries. The magnificent 19 2,5 | of the fourth, fifth, and sixth centuries was like. One 20 2,5 | of the fourth, fifth, or sixth centuries.[191] To the beginning 21 2,5 | were reconstructed in the sixth century by Justinian. In 22 3,2 | Ravenna, dating back to the sixth century, Theodora is represented 23 3,3 | Byzantine Empire during the sixth century, with this difference 24 3,3 | attacking the Empire; in the sixth century it was the Empire 25 3,3 | century was still alive in the sixth century. It was the basis 26 3,4 | two great powers of the sixth century, the Byzantine Empire 27 3,4 | the Empire during the late sixth and early seventh centuries.~ 28 3,4 | to another source of the sixth century, the Syrian John 29 3,4 | East and the West in the sixth century was already so great 30 3,5 | legislative work of the sixth century has been of unceasing 31 3,5 | the Eastern Empire in the sixth century. The success of 32 3,7 | 553 until the end of the sixth century, and only when Gregory 33 3,8 | clear. The sources of the sixth century, Justinian’s period, 34 3,8 | of his actions.~ In the sixth century the most influential 35 3,8 | the fact that early in the sixth century in Rome under Theodoric 36 3,8 | the social struggle in the sixth century. The government 37 3,8 | Apions, possessed in the sixth century vast landed property 38 3,8 | Corippus, a poet of the sixth century, puts it.[94] The 39 3,9 | 99] in the middle of the sixth century. This work is extremely 40 3,9 | this account that in the sixth century Ceylon was the center 41 3,9 | of the fourth, fifth, and sixth centuriesArcadius, Theodosius, 42 3,9 | international economic life of the sixth century the Byzantine Empire 43 3,9 | original manuscript of the sixth century has not survived, 44 3,12| that at the end of the sixth century the Greeks were 45 3,12| 122]~ At the end of the sixth and the beginning of the 46 3,12| kingdom. In the middle of the sixth century the Lombards, in 47 3,12| time, at the end of the sixth century, that the Roman 48 3,14| dates back to the end of the sixth century, to the period of 49 3,14| also from the end of the sixth century, the time of Emperor 50 3,14| South at the end of the sixth century, the attacks of 51 3,15| in the second half of the sixth century, a theory of the 52 3,15| Slavonic invasions of the sixth century created a situation 53 3,15| church historian of the late sixth century, Evagrius, who wrote: “ 54 3,15| Greece from the end of the sixth century, though they resulted 55 3,16| Byzantine Empire in the sixth century. Thus, all the works 56 3,16| peninsula at the end of the sixth century.~ Justinian’s ambassador 57 3,16| wrote at the end of the sixth century and probably covered 58 3,16| history of the fifth and sixth centuries is the work of 59 3,16| who died at the end of the sixth century. His Ecclesiastical 60 3,16| historians and geographers, the sixth century also had its chroniclers. 61 3,16| The true chronicler of the sixth century was the uneducated 62 3,16| in the latter part of the sixth century (probably in the 63 3,16| Byzantine Empire in the sixth century, especially with 64 3,16| continued throughout the sixth century, aroused much literary 65 3,16| life in the East during the sixth century left its traces 66 3,16| hagiographic writers of the sixth century one must place Cyril 67 3,16| lived at the end of the sixth and early part of the seventh 68 3,16| the Byzantine court in the sixth century.~ Papyri have revealed 69 3,16| Dioscorus, who lived in the sixth century in a small village 70 3,16| Constantius, but toward the sixth century it was in a state 71 3,16| Western Roman emperors; in the sixth century it became the capital 72 3,16| from the middle of the sixth century to the middle of 73 3,16| Ravenna. The mosaic of the sixth century can be seen in the 74 3,16| Here the mosaics of the sixth century have been preserved 75 3,16| Byzantine art of the fifth and sixth centuries.~ The building 76 3,16| transfiguration ascribed to the sixth century.[168]~ Several very 77 4,1 | particularly powerful in the sixth century under Justinian, 78 4,1 | From the second half of the sixth century the Slavs not only 79 4,3 | The Sixth Ecumenical Council and religious 80 4,3 | 680 in Constantinople the Sixth Ecumenical Council, which 81 4,3 | communication sent by the sixth council to the pope addressed 82 4,3 | nevertheless took part in the Sixth Ecumenical Council by sending 83 4,3 | excommunicated. The decisions of the sixth council proved to Syria, 84 4,3 | reached with Rome on the Sixth Ecumenical Council lasted 85 4,3 | the task of the Fifth and Sixth Ecumenical Councils, Justinian 86 4,4 | geographical works of the fifth and sixth centuries, used very superficially 87 4,4 | the confirmation of the Sixth Ecumenical Council. This 88 4,4 | established at the end of the sixth century. The attacks of 89 4,4 | Chosroes Nushirvan, in the sixth century. In Persia also 90 4,4 | basis of the acts of the Sixth Ecumenical Council and the 91 4,4 | with the second half of the sixth century, Byzantine art makes 92 5,3 | Justinian the Great, in the sixth century, the Latin text 93 5,4 | denounced icons. In the sixth century a serious upheaval 94 5,4 | Marseilles) at the end of the sixth century ordered that all 95 5,6 | policy of Justinian in the sixth century, and this idea was 96 5,8 | changes in Asia Minor. In the sixth century under Justinian 97 5,8 | fresco representing the Sixth Ecumenical Council, Constantine 98 6,8 | in the second half of the sixth century. The Turks also 99 6,8 | geographical works of the fifth and sixth centuries. It was also in 100 6,8 | the clumsy forms of the sixth century, which continued 101 7,1 | short time at the end of the sixth decade of the eleventh century ( 102 8,17| Code of Justinian in the sixth century, which was proclaimed 103 8,17| History is a work of the sixth century, biased and one-sided, 104 8,17| which not only affected the sixth century but continued far 105 8,17| Apions possessed in the sixth century vast landed property 106 8,17| exarchs of the close of the sixth century, who under Emperor 107 9,6 | in the beginning of the sixth decade, in the Bosphorus. 108 9,12| in the fourth, fifth, and sixth centuries.”[257]~ The Union 109 9,18| and the beginning of the sixth century. Byzantine mysticism 110 9,19| conquests of Justinian in the sixth century had introduced to 111 9,19| gradually increased. In the sixth and seventh centuries many


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