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Alphabetical    [«  »]
christodulus 5
christological 1
christopher 2
chronicle 59
chronicler 38
chroniclers 18
chronicles 10
Frequency    [«  »]
60 use
60 venetian
59 athos
59 chronicle
59 further
59 party
59 places
A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine empire

IntraText - Concordances

chronicle

   Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,4 | Hieronymus remarked in his Chronicle (360-62 A.D): “Euanthius, 2 2,5 | greater importance. The Chronicle, written apparently before 3 2,5 | from an adaptation of The Chronicle which appeared soon after 4 3,11| truce (574).[117] A Syrian chronicle of the twelfth century, 5 3,16| history in the form of a chronicle embracing the period from 6 3,16| Malalas, the author of a Greek chronicle of the history of the world, 7 3,16| a later period.[145] The chronicle is Christian and apologetic 8 3,16| mentality of the masses, this chronicle exerted an enormous influence 9 3,16| original Greek text of his chronicle.[147]~ In addition to the 10 4,1 | Seville, who remarked in his chronicle that “Heraclius entered 11 4,1 | districts. According to a chronicle, the Mardaites formed “a 12 4,4 | Chronicon Paschale (Easter Chronicle). John of Antioch, who lived 13 4,4 | Heraclius, wrote a universal chronicle including the period from 14 4,4 | Chronicon Paschale (Easter Chronicle) which, although it is nothing 15 5,2 | types, according to the chronicle of Theophanes, sailed through 16 5,8 | exaggerated words of the Arabian chronicle. Mutasim expected to march 17 5,8 | when a short anonymous chronicle found in Brussels was published 18 5,8 | recognized as erroneous. This chronicle gives very exact information: 19 5,8 | publication of the anonymous chronicle, and on the basis of various 20 5,8 | appearance of the anonymous chronicle of Brussels, and entirely 21 5,8 | of George Syncellus his chronicle was continued in the early 22 5,8 | died in the year 817. The chronicle of Theophanes deals with 23 5,8 | Latin translation of his chronicle, made by the papal librarian, 24 5,8 | iconoclasts, left a universal chronicle from Adam to the death of 25 5,8 | of the ninth century. The chronicle of Hamartolus formed the 26 5,8 | illustrated copy of the Chronicle of Hamartolus that has come 27 5,8 | Slavo-Russian translation of the chronicle of Hamartolus, supplemented 28 5,8 | the continuation of this chronicle which formed the basis of 29 6,4 | as given in the Russian chronicle), which permits the Russians, 30 6,8 | abbreviators, or revisers of the Chronicle of Symeon Logothete, whose 31 7,1 | 1100, or, as a Georgian chronicle asserted, when “a Frankish 32 7,1 | Edessa. An anonymous Syriac chronicle recently translated into 33 7,1 | Furthermore, a western chronicle affords very interesting 34 7,3 | Constantinople.~ A Russian chronicle of Novgorod, in which is 35 7,3 | in any city!” A Russian chronicle of Novgorod describes in 36 7,3 | particularly in the so-called Chronicle of Morea (fourteenth century) 37 7,3 | exact exposition of fact the Chronicle of Morea cannot occupy a 38 7,3 | Morea at that time. The Chronicle of Morea, as a source exceptionally 39 7,3 | Morea, and probably the Chronicle of Morea itself, influenced 40 7,3 | latter is represented in the Chronicle of Morea. In a conversation 41 7,3 | under the influence of the Chronicle of Morea, and therefore 42 7,4 | composing a sort of family chronicle or memoir the purpose of 43 7,4 | Constantine Manasses composed his chronicle in verse in her honor, calling 44 7,4 | in Russia, and a Russian chronicle states under the year 1089 45 7,4 | Comneni, the dull Byzantine chronicle has also several representatives 46 7,4 | century not the usual dry chronicle but “a manual of world history 47 7,4 | John Comnenus in 1118. The chronicle of Constantine Manasses, 48 7,4 | continuation of ManassesChronicle was published. It contains 49 7,4 | twelfth century a world chronicle of events down to the death 50 8,16| in 1261.~ The Byzantine chronicle of that period is represented 51 8,16| century, a brief universal chronicle having no historical or 52 8,17| contained in the so-called Chronicle of Morea, a rich mine of 53 9,6 | the statement of a Russian chronicle, no single man was left 54 9,8 | in Constantinople in his Chronicle on the Turkish Empire.[189] 55 9,18| Palaeologian epoch in general.~ The Chronicle of Phrantzes has been preserved 56 9,18| certain Ephraim, who wrote a chronicle in verse (about 10,000 lines) 57 9,18| The Greek version of the Chronicle of Morea, more than nine 58 9,18| original language of the Chronicle is still under debate: some 59 9,18| fourteenth century containing the chronicle of John Scylitzes with about


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