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Alphabetical    [«  »]
gepids 2
gerbert 4
gerland 2
german 108
germanic 33
germanicea 5
germanicopolis 1
Frequency    [«  »]
109 former
109 spite
108 continued
108 german
108 literary
107 cultural
107 frederick
A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine empire

IntraText - Concordances

german

    Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,1 | judgment of the well-known German historian, Jacob Burckhardt, 2 2,1 | on different grounds, the German theologian Adolph Harnack, 3 2,1 | Christianity. Schoenebeck, the German historian, questioned Grégoire’ 4 2,1 | unreservedly.~ In 1891 the German scholar O. Seeck advanced 5 2,2 | Eudoxia, the daughter of a German (Frankish) chief; and the 6 2,3 | the steady advance of the German barbarians, the Goths, who 7 2,3 | population, provoked by the German outrages, finally revolted 8 2,3 | among its students.~ ~The German (Gothic) problem in the 9 2,3 | its greater part into a German army, whose members often 10 2,3 | responsible posts were in German hands. Theodosius, in following 11 2,3 | background, watched the growth of German power with restlessness. 12 2,3 | to see very clearly the German menace to the Empire, and 13 2,3 | through the efforts of a German, Fravitta, who was designated 14 2,3 | severe crisis because of the German migrations. The most terrific 15 2,5 | importance of the leaders of German troops increased very greatly 16 2,5 | century of the barbarian German kingdoms in the West, became 17 2,5 | was practically ruled by German chiefs, and at the end of 18 2,5 | of the nineteenth century German scholars advanced the theory 19 3,3 | were the Germans. Thus the German question reappeared in the 20 3,3 | ruler he could not allow the German Arians to oppress the orthodox 21 3,4 | Besides the Slavs, the German Gepids and Kotrigurs, a 22 3,5 | Corpus Juris into Russian. A German scholar published a contemporary 23 3,12| possession of it.”[121] A German scholar of the early nineteenth 24 3,12| again conquered by a new German barbarian tribe, the Lombards, 25 3,15| it was that from a small German town came a voice which 26 3,15| general history in one of the German lyceums.~ In the first volume 27 3,15| Evagrius did not confuse this German scholar, for at that period 28 3,15| opponent of Fallmerayer was the German historian, Carl Hopf, who 29 4,3 | Pope Constantine, as the German church historian, Hefele, 30 5,3 | authority on Byzantine law, the German scholar Zachariä von Lingenthal, 31 5,3 | place. He agreed with the German scholar, however, that the “ 32 5,6 | part of the empire. The German historian P. Schramm, who 33 5,6 | Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation.”~ Only after the 34 6,2 | the collisions with the German king, Otto the Great, in 35 6,2 | Theophano, to the heir of the German throne, the future Emperor 36 6,2 | The intervention of the German Emperor Otto II (related 37 6,6 | rival in the person of the German ruler, Otto I, crowned with 38 6,6 | Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation.” Upon assuming the 39 6,6 | offensive alliance with the German ruler against the Muslims, 40 6,6 | the eastern Emperor the German ruler sent to Constantinople 41 6,6 | treaty of peace with the German ruler, but he strengthened 42 6,6 | after. From this time on German advance into the Byzantine 43 6,6 | secret of his hatred for German coarseness, and dreamed 44 6,7 | after the coronation of the German King Otto I and the growth 45 6,8 | for investiture with the German king Henry IV. At the time 46 7,1 | investigator of it, the German scholar, Hagenmeyer, agreed 47 7,1 | French Academy: one book by a German, A. Heeren, which was published 48 7,1 | published at the same time in German and French under the title 49 7,1 | Citing these words of the German scholar Kugler, the French 50 7,1 | Empire.” In a letter to the German king, Henry IV, the pope 51 7,1 | critical investigation of a German historian, H. Sybel, published 52 7,1 | Byzantium, but also to the German sovereign, who had important 53 7,1 | constant friendship,” that the German sovereign promised to be “ 54 7,1 | person with all forces of the German state. Manuel’s marriage 55 7,1 | adversaries as the Byzantine and German sovereigns, he did not venture 56 7,1 | it deprived Byzantium of German support and exposed the 57 7,1 | Germany to the crusade. The German scholar Kugler, who was 58 7,1 | First Crusade.~ When the German troops had pitched their 59 7,1 | a pitiful remnant of the German army returned to Nicaea. 60 7,1 | ascribe the failure of the German expedition to the intrigues 61 7,1 | about the disaster of the German army. The sovereigns met 62 7,1 | on together. The Franco‑German troops are known to have 63 7,1 | strife between the French and German troops as well as between 64 7,1 | Venice; under the pressure of German danger the latter passed 65 7,1 | Frederick announced that the German emperors, who had received 66 7,1 | latter and reconciled the German sovereign to the pope. In 67 7,2 | Frederick would give him noble German hostages and pledge himself 68 7,2 | the Germans in Asia. The German ambassadors who were in 69 7,2 | In the spring, 1190, the German army crossed the Hellespont.~ 70 7,3 | the epoch of Henry VI, the German influence was preponderant 71 7,3 | undermined by the policy of the German sovereigns, and to putting 72 7,3 | in his struggle with the German influence. Seeing the chief 73 7,3 | the Comneni to replace the German world state by a similar 74 7,3 | had been married to the German king, Philip of Swabia; 75 7,3 | against Byzantium. Then the German historian, Karl Hopf, seemed 76 7,3 | found, the authority of the German scholar was so great that 77 7,3 | place nor time; thus the German intrigue may be proved as 78 7,3 | refuted the theory of the German sovereign’s role and returned 79 7,3 | the nineteenth century a German historian, W. Norden, definitely 80 7,3 | the pope, Venice, and the German king in the West, as well 81 7,4 | disputations at Constantinople. A German, Anselm of Havelberg, who 82 7,4 | was purely political. The German historian Norden rightly 83 7,4 | rights, in the hands of the German king, Frederick; if, for 84 7,4 | the imperial power of the German kings. He chose as his hero 85 7,4 | the Emperor Manuel, the German princess Bertha-Irene, who 86 8,10| least in his youth, he spoke German badly. He regarded religious 87 8,10| 71] A few years ago a German historian said; “In his 88 8,13| the severe judgment of a German historian, Gregorovius, “ 89 8,13| sophistical maxim of the German philosopher who asserted 90 8,13| absurdity.”[113] Another German historian remarked: “The 91 8,16| published in 1896 by the German scholar, A. Heisenberg. 92 8,17| commendatio, or sometimes by a German word, mundium. Finally, 93 8,17| derived this word from the German word Frohne (socage, compulsory 94 8,17| which passed to Byzantium in German shape. In his opinion, “ 95 8,17| Even if we suppose that German immunity has Roman roots, 96 8,17| reception of Frankish kings or German emperors. The reception 97 8,17| i.e. a rider, knight (in German Ritter), “whose heart was 98 9,3 | 1281 but according to the German scholar F. Dölger did not 99 9,4 | leader Roger de Flor, a German by origin, whose father100 9,4 | the Spanish race.[81] The German historian Hopf declared 101 9,4 | into negotiations with the German king, Frederick Barbarossa, 102 9,4 | colonization is felt even today. A German scholar of the first half 103 9,4 | G. Hahn, the author of a German work Albanian Studies, estimated 104 9,7 | of Morea, Theodore. The German historian, Pallmerayer, 105 9,8 | the French, English, and German, are rather formidable, 106 9,13| fourteenth century. The German Byzantinist Gelzer rather 107 9,13| the Empire.[278] But the German Byzantinist Gelzer drew 108 9,19| excellent works. For example, a German scholar, G. Körting, observed: “


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