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Alphabetical [« »] cultivators 1 cultural 107 culturally 2 culture 63 cultured 1 cultures 2 cultus 1 | Frequency [« »] 63 agreement 63 brother 63 concerning 63 culture 63 earlier 63 event 63 others | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances culture |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,1 | the world. The old pagan culture came into collision with 2 2,1 | Christian-Greco-Eastern culture subsequently known as Byzantine. 3 2,1 | already possessed an old world culture and had developed forms 4 2,2 | Finally, in the matter of culture, Constantinople had the 5 2,2 | important centers of Hellenistic culture, which under Christian influence 6 2,2 | Christian-Greco-Roman, or “Byzantine,” culture. Th. I. Uspensky wrote:~ ~ 7 2,2 | Constantinople he saved the ancient culture and created a favorable 8 2,2 | through long centuries higher culture and older forms of government, 9 2,3 | acquainted with the classical culture of antiquity, while by continuous 10 2,3 | certain elements of Roman culture, and to draw them into the 11 2,3 | main center of Hellenistic culture became the Egyptian city, 12 2,3 | Syria, and Egypt, Hellenic culture predominated. Of these three 13 2,3 | of Syria, where Hellenic culture reached only the higher 14 2,3 | the very center of world culture, Hellenism spread among 15 2,5 | pagan world with its great culture. The debates of the Christian 16 2,5 | apologists found merit in Greek culture and considered it reconcilable 17 2,5 | the relation between pagan culture and Christianity was by 18 2,5 | of the elements of pagan culture, so that, according to Krumbacher, “ 19 2,5 | Antioch, the Syrian center of culture, produced in opposition 20 2,5 | felt that the classical culture so dear to him was gradually 21 2,5 | replaced the old Hellenistic culture of the East, which was in 22 2,5 | established pre-existing culture to resist or to control 23 4,1 | Roman, whose language and culture are Greek, whose faith is 24 4,1 | deep the Arab language and culture spread over Spain. A large 25 4,1 | Christians adopted Arabic culture though they did not adopt 26 4,1 | the Berbers to a higher culture by means of religious propaganda. 27 5,8 | a new phase in Byzantine culture.[121]~ The revolution of 28 6,3 | services in the realms of culture and education. His wide 29 6,3 | were penetrated by Hellenic culture. The Bulgarian people, however, 30 6,6 | Byzantine Empire and classical culture, was a contemporary and 31 6,7 | Byzantine jurisprudence and culture, ranking after the Corpus 32 6,8 | the remnants of ancient culture.”[167]~ Another eminent 33 7,1 | economic history and general culture. For a long time the religious 34 7,1 | uncongenial to Byzantium and whose culture at that time was not equal 35 7,1 | was not equal to Byzantine culture, also brought about consequences 36 7,4 | superiority of Byzantine culture over that of the western 37 7,4 | reflected the general rise of culture which found expression especially 38 7,4 | in the field of general culture belongs also the talented 39 8,16| understood that spiritual culture was one of the foundations 40 8,16| information on the history and culture of the time. Two small geographical 41 8,16| the history of Byzantine culture.~ Among the pupils of Blemmydes 42 8,16| long time with Frankish culture; but the chief problem, 43 8,16| general history of Byzantine culture. The center which had been 44 8,16| Nicaea became a nursery of culture, which, amid political division, 45 8,16| the time. The rise of the culture of Italy in the thirteenth 46 8,16| acknowledged. But the rise of the culture of Nicaea during the same 47 8,16| history of general European culture of the thirteenth century.~ ~ 48 8,17| feudalism is a stage of culture through which, according 49 9,2 | powerful spiritual and artistic culture, which, considering the 50 9,2 | later section on Byzantine culture in the epoch of the Palaeologi.~ 51 9,9 | lamented as that of a center of culture. In his appeal to Pope Nicholas 52 9,18| was a center of ardent culture, both intellectual and artistic. 53 9,18| the viability of classical culture and to give grounds for 54 9,18| details on the Byzantine culture of the time.~ In philology 55 9,18| the blending of Frankish culture with Eastern living conditions 56 9,18| Chrysantza” the Frankish culture is still quite distinct 57 9,18| Lybistros” the Frankish culture has deeply penetrated the 58 9,19| rise of interest in antique culture.~ In the middle of the nineteenth 59 9,19| the history of medieval culture belongs to him … On the 60 9,19| Italy, because Byzantine culture there began to flourish 61 9,19| inheritance of the Greek culture of Sicily.”[460] A. Veselovsky, 62 9,19| monasteries. The bloom of that culture embraces the period from 63 9,19| of Hellas and her eternal culture. By transmitting classical