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Alphabetical [« »] frees 1 freest 1 freising 1 french 106 frenchman 9 frenchmen 2 frequent 29 | Frequency [« »] 107 written 106 comneni 106 considered 106 french 106 powerful 106 therefore 105 itself | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances french |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,1 | preconceived opinions. The French historian Boissier wrote 2 3,3 | on their coins, etc. The French scholar Diehl[18] said that 3 3,8 | expenditures. According to the French scholar, Diehl, this formed 4 3,14| menace.~ According to the French scholar, Diehl,[130] the 5 3,16| Latin, Italian, Spanish, French, and Slavonic. Some of the 6 3,16| John at Ephesus, and on French soil in St. Front at Perigueux. 7 5,4 | history of its own.[66] The French Byzantine scholar, Bréhier, 8 5,7 | Roman Empire,”[117] while a French historian characterized 9 5,8 | Damascene, but in 1886 the French orientalist, H. Zotenberg, 10 6,2 | Muslims. In the words of the French historian, Rambaud, “All 11 7,1 | wife, Mary (Maria), was a French lady of rare beauty, a daughter 12 7,1 | considered as a “foreigner.” The French historian Diehl compared 13 7,1 | who in the time of the French revolution was similarly 14 7,1 | Normans. Robert Guiscard, the French historian Chalandon declared, “ 15 7,1 | others, for example the French scholar Riant, regarded 16 7,1 | Robert of Flanders. The French historian Chalandon admitted 17 7,1 | France, where in 1806 the French Academy and then the National 18 7,1 | were crowned in 1808 by the French Academy: one book by a German, 19 7,1 | same time in German and French under the title An Essay 20 7,1 | German scholar Kugler, the French historian, Chalandon, added: “ 21 7,1 | in Jerusalem, so that the French historian Bréhier judged 22 7,1 | and devastations,” said a French historian, “will the Mediterranean 23 7,1 | pilgrims, at whose head was a French abbot and among whom were 24 7,1 | at the head of the middle French army; Robert of Normandy 25 7,1 | the head of the two north French armies. At the head of the 26 7,1 | At the head of the south French army stood Raymond, count 27 7,1 | Crusade, then, belonged to the French.~ One part of the crusading 28 7,1 | comparison, as says the French historian Chalandon, may 29 7,1 | recently translated into French affords a detailed account 30 7,1 | Vezelay, in Burgundy, the French feudaries were against the 31 7,1 | the antagonism between the French and Germans during the crusade 32 7,1 | before the arrival of the French army; finally, after some 33 7,1 | failure of the Germans.~ The French who had approached the capital 34 7,1 | into Greece reached the French, who were standing under 35 7,1 | mind to transporting the French also into Asia Minor. A 36 7,1 | the strife between the French and German troops as well 37 7,1 | the head of the army. A French abbot wrote to the Sicilian 38 7,1 | effect partly because the French chivalry responded to the 39 7,1 | nausea of it and that many French have disdained and blamed 40 7,3 | broken the spears of the French, the efforts of the English, 41 7,3 | crusading army was composed of French, Flemish, English, Germans, 42 7,3 | a participant in it, the French historian Geoffrey de Villehardouin. 43 7,3 | 1861, for the first time, a French scholar, Mas-Latrie, author 44 7,3 | date was quite arbitrary. A French scholar, Hanotaux, who a 45 7,3 | was brought forward by a French scholar. Count de Riant, 46 7,3 | the Fourth Crusade was a French crusade, and the conquest 47 7,3 | Germanic nor Venetian, but French. Of Riant’s premeditation 48 7,3 | present day. “This,” said the French historian Luchaire, “will 49 7,3 | participant in the crusade, the French writer Villehardouin, described 50 7,3 | France, perished during the French Revolution. The four bronze 51 7,3 | which was organized by the French.~ Geoffrey de Villehardouin, 52 7,3 | Peloponnesus was converted into the French Principality of Achaia, 53 7,3 | any great king.” “There French was spoken as well as in 54 7,3 | versions, Greek (in verse), French, Italian, and Spanish. If 55 7,4 | doctrine of Abelard, a famous French scholar and professor of 56 7,4 | investigator of this period, the French scholar Chalandon, died 57 7,4 | Celts from beyond the Alps” (French), and men who came from 58 7,4 | with the statement by a French writer: “In the twelfth 59 7,4 | Constantinople, papal, imperial, French, Pisan, and others, and 60 8,8 | that “the strength of the French [in the East] has decreased 61 8,10| the nineteenth century, a French historian wrote that Frederick 62 8,16| Greek lands. The medieval French romance which had proved 63 8,16| of scholars thinks that a French romance of chivalry, still 64 8,16| but a Greek version of the French tale of a well-known French 65 8,16| French tale of a well-known French knight of the fourteenth 66 8,16| Greek lands. Just as the French romances of the twelfth 67 8,16| the East. Therefore the French literature of the twelfth 68 8,16| course, some influence from French literature in the epoch 69 8,16| But, generally speaking, French and Byzantine romances have 70 8,16| of John’s writings by the French scholar Pétridès, on the 71 8,17| to the central power. The French scholar Charles Diehl wrote 72 8,17| one felt,” according to a French historian, A. Rambaud, “ 73 8,17| feudalism in general. A French historian who made a special 74 8,17| the purest expression of French feudalism;” the compilers 75 8,17| Haute Cour are in essence French feudal law, and the feudal 76 8,17| was translated into modern French. Thus these Franco-Eastern 77 9,2 | Palaeologus resembled, to the French scholar, Diehl, “a slender, 78 9,2 | Byzantine historian, and by a French pilgrim to the Holy Land, 79 9,2 | Trebizond and Iberia.[28] The French historian Diehl remarked 80 9,3 | Anjou opened the era of French expeditions to Italy—an 81 9,3 | Sicily and Naples came under French sway. Charles of Anjou became 82 9,3 | of the Two Sicilies. The French began to leave their country 83 9,3 | in full measure under the French sway in the Kingdom of the 84 9,3 | which was to be held in the French city of Lyons, passed safely 85 9,3 | 31, 1282 a revolt against French domination burst out; it 86 9,3 | anger against the severe French domination. The arrogant 87 9,3 | arrogant attitude of the French to the subject population 88 9,3 | which according to the French scholar M. Canard was actually 89 9,4 | Fourth Crusade and was under French control. In the spring of 90 9,4 | decisive victory over the French troops. Putting an end to 91 9,4 | an end to the flourishing French duchy of Athens and Thebes, 92 9,7 | eminent families of the French chivalry were included among 93 9,7 | and, in the opinion of the French, was worthy of being Emperor.[ 94 9,7 | matter of course to the French, and contemporary chroniclers 95 9,7 | regenerated Hellas. The French Byzantinist, Ch. Diehl, 96 9,8 | have mentioned, i.e., the French, English, and German, are 97 9,11| was held in 1274 in the French city of Lyons. Michael sent 98 9,12| this party “by the modern French parliamentary term of opportunists.”[ 99 9,14| practically dependent on the French kings. The papal appeals 100 9,17| 1924.[292] In 1915, the French scholar G. Millet was sent 101 9,18| publication. According to the French scholar Guilland his letters 102 9,18| repeatedly pointed out. A French professor of medicine who 103 9,18| some scholars hold to the French version as the original, 104 9,19| purely Greek.”[463] An old French chronicler stated of the 105 9,19| were among his pupils. A French historian of the Renaissance, 106 9,19| Bessarion presents, as his French biographer said, better