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Alphabetical    [«  »]
citizens 11
citizenship 1
city 385
civil 84
civilians 1
civilis 2
civilization 31
Frequency    [«  »]
85 full
85 rule
85 though
84 civil
84 come
84 given
83 although
A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine empire

IntraText - Concordances

civil

   Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,1 | imperial title. A period of civil war followed, during which 2 2,1 | opponent agreed, to carry a civil suit to the episcopal court, 3 2,1 | already been started in the civil court. Toward the end of 4 2,1 | people of any age; (2) any civil case could be transferred 5 2,1 | had to be sanctioned by civil judges. All these judicial 6 2,2 | and definite separation of civil and military power. These 7 2,2 | whose powers were purely civil. The exact number of smaller 8 2,2 | official list of court, civil, and military offices, which 9 2,2 | powers were likewise purely civil. There were thirteen dioceses. 10 2,2 | at the head of the whole civil administration and controlled 11 2,2 | Empire, for purposes of civil government, was divided 12 2,2 | military authority from civil authority; from his time 13 2,2 | separation of military and civil functions, which led to 14 2,2 | concentrate military and civil authority in the same hands. 15 2,2 | Arians. During the ensuing civil strife Constantine, and 16 2,2 | bishops were exempted from civil trial.~ In spite of the 17 2,2 | Constantius refused to do so. A civil war seemed to be unavoidable. 18 2,2 | and announced that now, civil strifes having been ended, 19 2,2 | being gradually removed from civil and military posts and their 20 2,3 | throughout the Empire. The civil rights of the heretics were 21 2,5 | and were suppressed by the civil and military authorities 22 3,4 | peninsula. Taking advantage of civil war between different pretenders 23 3,5 | them. Such a handbook of civil law, intended primarily 24 3,5 | civilis, i.e., the “Corpus of Civil Law.” Today they are still 25 3,5 | Europe, Justinian’s code of civil law became the real law 26 3,6 | the aid of military and civil authorities.~ ~The closing 27 3,6 | so-called “Septuagint”). The civil rights of the population 28 3,8 | separating very distinctly civil and military authority. 29 3,8 | conflicts between military and civil authorities, he ordered 30 3,8 | life, Justinian entrusted a civil official, the Augustalis ( 31 3,8 | the former separation of civil and military power in the 32 3,14| in Italy by placing the civil administrative functions 33 3,14| direct the activities of all civil officials from his residence 34 3,14| the immediate abolition of civil officials. They continued 35 3,14| military exarch. Only later the civil officials seem to have been 36 3,14| military authority over the civil. While the attacks of the 37 3,16| construction of monuments of civil and religious architecture 38 3,16| achievements are his code of civil law and the cathedral of 39 4,1 | conquest the inadequate civil administration of Egypt.[ 40 4,1 | military organization and poor civil administration, and class 41 4,4 | complete superiority over the civil authorities. This process 42 4,4 | Armenia, he appointed no civil administrator. The authority 43 4,4 | and in the exarchates the civil authorities did not immediately 44 4,4 | to military rulers. The civil administration, the civil 45 4,4 | civil administration, the civil provinces (eparchies), continued 46 4,4 | more and more strongly in civil administration. “Heraclius’ 47 5,1 | led by one of the highest civil officials, Nicephorus, and 48 5,3 | considerable confusion in the civil law of the Byzantine Empire. 49 5,3 | titles, deal mainly with civil law, and only to a slight 50 5,3 | Ecloga are accepted by the civil legislation of the most 51 5,3 | Leo definitely removed the civil officials and transferred 52 5,3 | officials and transferred the civil power in the provinces into 53 5,3 | strategus at the expense of the civil administration of the province.”[ 54 5,3 | the complete removal of civil authorities and the transfer 55 5,8 | the proportions of a grave civil war, which lasted for a 56 5,8 | same source, the ensuing civil war, “like some bursting 57 6,2 | arose in the year 868, the civil wars among the North African 58 6,2 | introduced important military and civil reforms in Armenia with 59 6,7 | contained the principal norms of civil law and a complete list 60 6,7 | the patriarch, and other civil and ecclesiastic officials, 61 6,7 | combine both military and civil responsibilities. Some of 62 6,8 | attention to the affairs of civil government. The army and 63 6,8 | characterized as a reaction of the civil administration against the 64 6,8 | and various officials of civil administration. From them 65 7,1 | over the bureaucrats and civil regime of the capital, and 66 7,1 | of the Crusades upon the civil liberty of the peoples of 67 7,4 | and other vexations; “the civil officials had nothing to 68 8,2 | representatives of the Byzantine civil and military nobility, some 69 8,17| complete superiority over the civil authorities. These provincial 70 9,2 | grandfather’s attitude. Civil war broke out between grandfather 71 9,2 | famous Cantacuzene. The civil war ended in favor of Andronicus 72 9,2 | of age (1341-91). A long civil war, in which John Cantacuzene 73 9,2 | characteristic feature of the civil strife of the fourteenth 74 9,2 | especially after the destructive civil war and foreign failures, 75 9,3 | precursor of the political and civil autonomy of the Albanian 76 9,4 | came to nothing.~ After a civil war between the sons of 77 9,4 | Constantinople.~ During the civil war between the two Andronicoi, 78 9,5 | John V, when a devastating civil war began to tear the Empire, 79 9,6 | this was facilitated by the civil war in the Empire, in which 80 9,12| followers, giving place to new civil and ecclesiastical troubles.”[ 81 9,12| outside ecclesiastical or civil power and placed the monasteries 82 9,17| by the almost continuous civil strife and by the fatal 83 9,17| interests of that time, with the civil war between John V and John 84 9,18| This compilation contains civil and criminal law with some


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