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Alphabetical [« »] clearness 2 clemency 2 clement 5 clergy 96 clergyman 2 cleric 1 clerical 1 | Frequency [« »] 97 father 97 fifth 97 sicily 96 clergy 96 example 96 take 96 thirteenth | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances clergy |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,1 | doctrine. The Christian clergy (clerici) were given all 2 2,2 | Constantius the immunities of the clergy were broadened; bishops 3 2,3 | the privileges granted the clergy by Constantine the Great. 4 2,3 | the limited circle of the clergy, were taken up by all classes 5 2,3 | his attitude toward the clergy at large, that is, the Catholic ( 6 2,3 | is, the Catholic (Nicene) clergy, Theodosius was rather generous. 7 2,3 | predecessors to the bishops and clergy, privileges regarding personal 8 2,3 | debt collectors, and the clergy were prohibited from hiding 9 2,3 | advances the privileges of the clergy. The fact that it was very 10 2,3 | and the majority of the clergy. This party represented 11 2,5 | acquisitions of the eastern clergy which could eventually be 12 2,5 | parties increased. Part of the clergy favored the idea of reconciliation 13 2,5 | complaints of the eastern clergy, dissatisfied with the decree, 14 3,3 | and representatives of the clergy in jail, confiscating much 15 3,6 | administration and the fate of the clergy, even those of highest rank, 16 3,6 | regulate the life of the clergy, to fill the highest hierarchic 17 3,6 | judge in the affairs of the clergy. He showed his favorable 18 3,6 | church by protecting the clergy and by promoting the erection 19 3,9 | had their own church and clergy.~ It is interesting to note 20 3,14| reception: the senate, the clergy, and the populace met him 21 4,2 | representatives of the Greek clergy, at the Lateran Synod, Pope 22 4,4 | questions referring to the clergy and are dated from 612 to 23 5,4 | out of the hands of the clergy. These rulers acted, not 24 5,4 | the majority of the high clergy, and by the army. The final 25 5,5 | many members of the higher clergy accepted the decrees of 26 5,5 | raising the morality of the clergy by condemning the buying 27 5,8 | Byzantine Empire. Greek clergy came to Bulgaria to spread 28 5,8 | the hands of the Byzantine clergy did much to increase the 29 5,8 | Bulgaria, and the Greek clergy was driven out. The pope’ 30 5,8 | Boris to the Greek and Latin clergy did not signify a choice 31 5,8 | court party and the higher clergy, it may be said that the 32 5,8 | the great majority of the clergy favored image-worship. The 33 5,8 | the greater part of the clergy, the majority of the inhabitants 34 6,7 | Bulgaria, where the Latin clergy had triumphed at the end 35 6,7 | formed among the Byzantine clergy. The first, which sided 36 6,7 | lands into the hands of the clergy. The iconoclastic emperors 37 6,7 | circles of western European clergy, developed under the direct 38 6,7 | as simony, wedlock of the clergy, secular investiture, etc.). 39 6,7 | official circles by the clergy and the government. The 40 6,7 | reconciliation with the higher clergy and landed nobility, repealed 41 7,1 | by the patriarch with his clergy; then, through an enormous 42 7,3 | the hands of the Venetian clergy, and a Venetian, Thomas 43 7,3 | into the hands of the Latin clergy.~ While the Duchy of Athens 44 7,3 | The pope called upon all clergy, all sovereigns, and all 45 7,4 | the twelfth century by the clergy. A celebrated Greek canonist 46 7,4 | moral decline among the clergy also alarmed Alexius Comnenus, 47 7,4 | exposed to danger, for the clergy with every day becomes worse;” 48 7,4 | the moral standard of the clergy by ameliorating their life 49 7,4 | attacks made upon it by the clergy, and in addition he was 50 8,2 | by the Constantinopolitan clergy after the flight of Alexius 51 8,7 | Thessalonica and Epirus), of the clergy, and of all the large army.”[ 52 8,7 | movement was taken by the Greek clergy and especially by the Greek 53 8,9 | Epirus. The Latin knights and clergy, however, stubbornly resisted 54 8,10| privileges of the western clergy, the Emperor exclaimed: “ 55 8,12| at the present time the clergy and population of Magnesia 56 8,13| members of the Catholic clergy had time enough to leave 57 8,14| elected from the Venetian clergy. The interests of the Roman 58 8,14| patriarch. And when the new clergy of St. Sophia, consisting 59 8,14| papal throne to the Greek clergy who remained within the 60 8,14| the majority of the lower clergy did not abandon their places. 61 8,14| tried to persuade the Greek clergy to join the union.~ In 1204, 62 8,14| the consent of the Greek clergy to the recognition of the 63 8,14| The position of the Greek clergy became more complicated 64 8,14| Emperor Henry, the Greek clergy of the Latin Empire applied 65 8,14| of influence on the Latin clergy in the East, Innocent III, 66 8,14| Latin Emperor and the Latin clergy — and Innocent IV acceded 67 8,16| portion of the Orthodox Greek clergy, both in independent Epirus 68 8,17| concerned both laity and clergy. Of course this evolution 69 8,17| granted both to laymen and to clergy. Possibly this peculiarity 70 8,17| the daily substance of its clergy, necessary upkeep of the 71 8,17| and all other needs of the clergy.[223]~ The privileged monasteries 72 8,17| century for the Christian clergy by Constantine the Great 73 8,17| passed to the bishops and clergy; towards the end of the 74 8,17| landowners among both laity and clergy. A strong reaction against 75 9,4 | the hands of the Catalan clergy, who were impressed by its 76 9,5 | draw to his side the Greek clergy of the conquered regions; 77 9,5 | approbation of the highest Greek clergy of the conquered regions 78 9,5 | all the higher Serbian clergy with the archbishop of Serbia 79 9,5 | the Bulgarian and Greek clergy of the conquered regions, 80 9,5 | Serbia, large landowners and clergy, who had exerted enormous 81 9,11| opposition among the Greek clergy who, in an overwhelming 82 9,11| great majority of the Greek clergy. An antiunion council against 83 9,12| care to have an educated clergy, but they faithfully observed 84 9,12| monks, but among the secular clergy and the educated classes 85 9,12| few partisans among both clergy and laymen. The result was 86 9,12| majority of the Eastern clergy and population was opposed 87 9,12| upper hand of the secular clergy. This movement ended in 88 9,12| elected from the secular clergy. “From this time on the 89 9,13| the monks and the secular clergy, a struggle which, during 90 9,14| representative of the Byzantine clergy. In October 1369, in Rome, 91 9,15| other representatives of the clergy and laity arrived at Ferrara 92 9,15| numerous retinue of the Russian clergy and laity accompanied him. 93 9,16| representatives of the Orthodox clergy who had come to Constantinople, 94 9,16| proclaimed inviolable. The clergy was exempted from taxes, 95 9,16| rule was elected by the clergy soon after the capture of 96 9,19| which, in many places, the clergy and people were purely Greek.”[