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Alphabetical    [«  »]
latinize 1
latinophile 6
latinorum 1
latins 94
latium 1
latros 1
latter 105
Frequency    [«  »]
95 greatly
95 letter
94 gave
94 latins
94 side
94 significance
94 small
A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine empire

IntraText - Concordances

latins

   Chapter, Paragraph
1 7,1 | to their hatred for the Latins. A raging mob attacked the 2 7,1 | and began to massacre the Latins, without distinction of 3 7,1 | insulted and beheaded; many Latins were sold into slavery in 4 7,1 | By that massacre of the Latins in 1182, as Th. Uspensky 5 7,1 | also among the western Latins. Anna Comnena wrote that 6 7,1 | Constantinople into the hands of the Latins rather than those of the 7 7,1 | stimulate the ardor of the Latins, the message gives a long 8 7,1 | was created between the Latins and the Greeks; in their 9 7,1 | This scene has rendered the Latins despicable in the whole 10 7,1 | Byzantine policy towards the Latins. It was the result of more 11 7,1 | capital, the massacre of the Latins had taken place. Venetian 12 7,1 | Kingdom of Sicily.~ Then the Latins who had escaped the massacre 13 7,1 | massacre, the revenge of the Latins for the massacre of 1182. 14 7,1 | between us and them [the Latins] a bottomless gulf of enmity 15 7,2 | a stubborn attack by the Latins and desperate resistance 16 7,2 | Greeks and later to the Latins.” Byzantium could not cope 17 7,2 | Since the massacre of the Latins in Constantinople in 1182 18 7,3 | well as the massacre of the Latins in 1182. The Doge could 19 7,3 | strained relations between the Latins and Greeks. In the city 20 7,3 | fall into the teeth of the Latins as a tidbit or dessert,” 21 7,3 | city, for three days, the Latins treated the city with appalling 22 7,3 | collected and divided among the Latins, both laymen and ecclesiastics. 23 7,3 | Partitio Romanie), as the Latins and Greeks often called 24 7,3 | the shores of Attica. The Latins conquered Athens, which, 25 7,3 | Great Comneni.”~ If the Latins in the East had no political 26 7,3 | political subjugation by the Latins, did not adopt Catholicism. 27 7,4 | Bulgaria, On the Errors of the Latins, in which V. Vasilievsky 28 7,4 | acknowledge the errors of the Latins to be so numerous as to 29 7,4 | other hand, some learned Latins from the West took part 30 7,4 | there were present not a few Latins, among them three wise men 31 7,4 | famous among Greeks and Latins above all others for his 32 7,4 | discontent existing between the Latins and Greeks, and to find 33 7,4 | Muhammedans] to that of the Latins. This statement of the patriarch, 34 7,4 | would withdraw from the Latins “as from the serpent’s poison.” 35 7,4 | already openly hostile to the Latins.~ ~Defense and commerce. — 36 7,4 | terrible massacre of the Latins in 1182 their position became 37 7,4 | statutes destroyed by the Latins in Constantinople in 1204; 38 7,4 | book On the Errors of the Latins. Almost all his letters 39 7,4 | book On the Errors of the Latins, was remarkable in its conciliatory 40 7,4 | Normans of Sicily and the Latins of Syria, Byzantium continued 41 8,2 | exile before the invading Latins, wrote a letter in which 42 8,2 | up to his master; and the Latins warned Kalojan that if he 43 8,2 | the Bulgarian king, the Latins at the same time also irritated 44 8,2 | the Bulgars against the Latins; the best possible opportunity 45 8,2 | of Constantinople by the Latins, had found a secure refuge 46 8,3 | After the defeat of the Latins at Hadrianople, Theodore’ 47 8,3 | check the successes of the Latins. But the Bulgarian danger 48 8,3 | Bulgarian danger to the Latins and the Seljuq danger to 49 8,5 | ends with an appeal to the Latins to support Henry. “To have 50 8,5 | we need a great number of Latins to whom we may give the 51 8,5 | considered all its sons, devoted Latins, as dogs and, because of 52 8,5 | certainly a calamity for the Latinspossibly for the Greeks 53 8,7 | state at the expense of the Latins and Bulgars.~ In his brother’ 54 8,8 | is to be feared that the Latins may be menaced by irreparable 55 8,8 | hostilities against the Latins in Asia Minor; then, by 56 8,8 | critical moment for the Latins. The Emperor of Thessalonica 57 8,8 | in his fight against the Latins, for he himself began to 58 8,9 | Serbian territories. The Latins [Franks] have kept only 59 8,9 | was directed against the Latins. One cannot help seeing 60 8,9 | offensive alliance against the Latins was the complete destruction 61 8,9 | domination, the expulsion of the Latins from Constantinople, and 62 8,10| Constantinople from the Latins and return it to the legal 63 8,13| chivalrous feudal state of the Latins belongs to the most worthless 64 8,13| condemnation the behavior of the Latins during their domination 65 8,13| raised in extenuation of the Latins, that of an eminent American 66 8,13| with the behavior of the Latins in regard to the famous 67 8,13| So, Swift concluded, “the Latins were not as black as they 68 8,14| regions conquered by the Latins, and then to clear up its 69 8,14| when at the head of the Latins stood the Latin patriarch, 70 8,14| refers to the fact that the Latins were the tool of Providence 71 8,16| taking of the capital by the Latins the boy Blemmydes and his 72 8,16| of Constantinople by the Latins in 1204.~ All of these works 73 8,16| as a polemist against the Latins and as the supposed author 74 8,16| polemic pieces against the Latins and several iambic poems.~ 75 9,1 | was under the power of the Latins, has come again under the 76 9,3 | Constantinople over to the Latins, and thereupon had been 77 9,4 | struggle against both the Latins and the Ottomans.~ ~Byzantium 78 9,4 | Peloponnesus and middle Greece the Latins continued to rule. As to 79 9,6 | be under the power of the Latins, particularly of Venice. 80 9,7 | passed into the power of the Latins. At the beginning of the 81 9,8 | hostilities against the Latins, quickly gained the Latin 82 9,9 | Constantinople, the Greeks and some Latins, particularly Italians.~ 83 9,9 | of Constantinople by the Latins in 1204, bewailed the event 84 9,9 | Greeks, the infamy of the Latins; through it the Catholic 85 9,9 | were still unknown to the Latins, styled the Turkish conquest 86 9,11| appeals to save what the Latins had accomplished in the 87 9,11| the sworn enemy of the Latins of Syria.~ From 1274 to 88 9,15| replaced by that of the Latins. At the beginning of the 89 9,17| sack and pillage by the Latins, was a ruin of the city 90 9,18| after the expulsion of the Latins, had come from Nicaea to 91 9,18| and urge the Greeks and Latins to unite their forces against 92 9,18| the Peloponnesus by the Latins, gives an interesting specimen 93 9,19| right to separate from the Latins in spite of all plausible 94 9,19| him “the best Greek of the Latins and the best Latin of the


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