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Alphabetical    [«  »]
mongus 1
moni 1
monk 26
monks 72
monnier 1
monogram 2
monograph 7
Frequency    [«  »]
72 epirus
72 fleet
72 means
72 monks
72 trade
72 true
71 commercial
A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine empire

IntraText - Concordances

monks

   Chapter, Paragraph
1 3,6 | the Syrian and Egyptian monks.”[61]~ The fundamental aim 2 3,7 | five hundred Monophysitic monks; they were likened to “a 3 3,16| reading among the Byzantine monks, serving as a guide to the 4 3,16| information about monasteries and monks. In some respects the contents 5 5,4 | and the enormous number of monks. Leo III was apparently 6 5,4 | the number of Byzantine monks in the iconoclastic period 7 5,4 | there are only about 40,000 monks and nuns, it is easy to 8 5,4 | duties; hence many of the monks were not men who had been 9 5,4 | persecution of monasteries and monks. No other iconoclastic ruler 10 5,5 | to the church and to the monks. Anathema was proclaimed 11 5,5 | initiated a crusade against the monks, those “idolaters and lovers 12 5,5 | fight directed against the monks; C. N. Uspensky stated definitely 13 5,5 | 94] The persecutions of monks expressed itself in many 14 5,5 | Asia Minor assembled the monks and nuns of his province 15 5,5 | of exile for recalcitrant monks. It is recorded that five 16 5,5 | It is recorded that five monks managed to escape from there, 17 5,5 | were taken away from the monks and transformed into barracks 18 5,5 | led to a wide migration of monks to districts unaffected 19 5,5 | now Otranto).[98] Many monks migrated also to the northern 20 5,5 | acute enmity towards the monks, who once more regained 21 5,5 | of the enormous number of monks, that is to say, against 22 5,7 | reduction of the number of monks and monasteries and of the 23 5,8 | of the patriarch and the monks. He was an obedient son 24 5,8 | practicing sorcery and magic. The monks, many of whom were icon-painters, 25 5,8 | iconoclastic emperors toward the monks and monasteries is to be 26 5,8 | Italy and Greece, all the monks and the greater part of 27 5,8 | families to Italy; thousands of monks founded numerous cave habitations 28 5,8 | intellectual needs of the monks were to be satisfied by 29 5,8 | established at the monastery. The monks were to be trained in reading, 30 5,8 | were the work of Byzantine monks, testify to the new spirit 31 6,2 | and riches were seized, monks were exiled, and pilgrims 32 6,7 | Arabs, during which many monks were killed or carried off 33 6,7 | three thousandvarious monks” on Mount Athos.[98] As 34 6,8 | Romanus Lecapenus, to bishops, monks, and various officials of 35 7,3 | soldiers, as well as the Latin monks and abbots, took part in 36 7,4 | independent republic where only monks could live.” The attacks 37 7,4 | forced Christodulus and the monks to leave Patmos and take 38 7,4 | enemies against him among the monks. From a cultural point of 39 7,4 | repeated appeals to the monks not to squander the treasures 40 8,14| In 1232 five Franciscan monks (Minorites) arrived in Nicaea 41 8,17| its struggle against the monks resorted to the secularization 42 8,17| obliged to maintain the monks and take care of the buildings, 43 8,17| granted to the Athenian monks, show all the traits of 44 8,17| one shall disturb those monks or enter the inner places 45 8,17| of land by the Athenian monks it may be supposed that 46 8,17| a considerable number of monks fled for refuge to the inland 47 8,17| mercilessly confiscated, and the monks themselves, as well as those 48 9,5 | regions as well as by the monks of the Greek monasteries 49 9,5 | Dushan’s hands, and the monks could not fail to understand 50 9,5 | benefaction in order that the monks dwelling therein may fulfil 51 9,6 | monasteries forced one of the monks, Athanasius, to leave Athos 52 9,9 | women, children, priests, monks, and nuns were compelled, 53 9,12| were often supported by the monks, and in the moments of their 54 9,12| triumph they opened to the monks the way to power and activity. 55 9,12| spirit prevailing among the monks when a zealot became patriarch 56 9,12| seemed to these malignant monks that after storm and troubles 57 9,12| sought support not among the monks, but among the secular clergy 58 9,12| element in Byzantium as the monks and, to some degree, the 59 9,12| bishops, interdicted priests, monks expelled from their monasteries, 60 9,12| their reliance upon the monks and monastic ideals, increased 61 9,12| century the zealots and monks gradually got the upper 62 9,12| triumph of the Athenian monks over the patriarchate of 63 9,12| exclusively occupied by monks, and the patriarchal throne 64 9,13| or, in other words, the monks and the secular clergy, 65 9,13| complete triumph for the monks. Th. Uspensky came to the 66 9,13| that the struggle of the monks (the party of the zealots) 67 9,13| especially among the Athenian monks, where the way to attaining 68 9,13| around them”; thus, the monks destroy the dogmas of the 69 9,13| Athos in particular. The monks dominated both the church 70 9,13| the life of the Athenian monks of the period. He wrote:~ ~ 71 9,17| importance. But the Orthodox monks of Mount Athos were too 72 9,19| century a vast number of Greek monks came to Italy, escaping


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