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Alphabetical [« »] days 70 daytime 1 dazzled 2 de 49 deacon 16 dead 18 deadliest 1 | Frequency [« »] 49 alexandria 49 barbarians 49 condition 49 de 49 failed 49 final 49 foreign | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances de |
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1 2,1 | Death of the Persecutors (De mortibus persecutorum), 2 2,1 | thus reducing paganism de jure from its former position 3 2,3 | other religious groups; de jure parity of religious 4 2,3 | Danube. “Thus,” said Fustel de Coulanges, “four or five 5 2,4 | distinguished historian as Fustel de Coulanges stated that “science 6 2,5 | important as the author of De mortibus persecutorum. This 7 2,5 | uncovered in 1860 and 1861 by M. de Vogue give some conception 8 3,16| Blessed Easterns (Commentarii de Beatis Onentalibus), and 9 5,3 | of Jettison,” lex Rhodia de jactu, dealing with the 10 6,6 | Constantinopolitan Legation (Relatio de legatione constantinopolitana), 11 6,8 | with the name of the G. de Jerphanion, S.I., who devoted 12 7,1 | an Englishman, Geoffrey de Haie (Galfridus de Haia) 13 7,1 | Geoffrey de Haie (Galfridus de Haia) was entrusted by Henry 14 7,1 | ambassadors; the same Geoffrey de Haie was sent in return 15 7,2 | handed over the island to Guy de Lusignan, ex-king of Jerusalem. 16 7,3 | French historian Geoffrey de Villehardouin. In his exposition 17 7,3 | a French scholar. Count de Riant, who tried to prove 18 7,3 | Burgundian knight, Othon de la Roche, who assumed the 19 7,3 | by the French.~ Geoffrey de Villehardouin, nephew of 20 7,3 | knights, a Frenchman, William de Champlitte, from the family 21 8,1 | Champlitte and after him Geoffrey de Villehardouin were princes 22 8,1 | Peloponnesus (Morea), and Othon de la Roche took the title 23 8,7 | of Constantinople, Peter de Courtenay, count of Auxerre. 24 8,7 | his brother-in-law, Peter de Courtenay, who had married 25 8,7 | cruelty.[52] The fate of Peter de Courtenay, like that of 26 8,7 | 19). The death of Peter de Courtenay must be regarded 27 8,7 | new Latin Emperor, Peter de Courtenay, the Kindom of 28 8,9 | the Latin Emperor, Robert de Courtenay (1228), the throne 29 8,13| prince of Achaia, William de Villehardouin. Michael Palaeologus 30 8,17| grants are called fiefs (de toto feudo, quod et Manuel 31 8,17| Dodu, wrote: “The Assises de la Haute Cour [this was 32 8,17| He wrote: “The Assises de la Haute Cour are in essence 33 9,2 | marry Michael to Catherine de Courtenay, daughter of the 34 9,4 | Catalans chose for leader Roger de Flor, a German by origin, 35 9,4 | fourteenth century Roger de Flor with his company arrived 36 9,4 | Hispano-Byzantine army, under Roger de Flor, freed Philadelphia 37 9,4 | Barcelona (the archives de la Corona d’Aragó), has 38 9,4 | called in Catalan Castell de Cetines, was fortified; 39 9,4 | Balkan peninsula, after Roger de Flor’s murder, and the internal 40 9,7 | Manuel’s activity, Berger de Xivrey, wrote: “This feeling 41 9,8 | Burgundian knight, Bertrandon de la Broquière, who visited 42 9,9 | universos Christifideles de expugnatione Constantinopolis) 43 9,17| Spanish traveler, Ruy Gonzales de Clavijo, wrote: “Everywhere 44 9,17| and moralist, Ghillebert de Lannoy, was kindly received 45 9,17| fifteenth century, Bertrandon de la Broquière, wrote that 46 9,18| is his narration of Roger de Flor’s Catalan expedition, 47 9,18| Expostio materiaria eorum quae de Deo a theologis dicuntur, 48 9,18| on the Life in Christ” (De vita in Christo), and “The 49 9,18| famous legendary Pèlerinage de Charlemagne have recently