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Alphabetical [« »] novella 1 novellae 2 novellas 1 novels 42 november 6 novgorod 6 noviter 1 | Frequency [« »] 42 intellectual 42 least 42 native 42 novels 42 organized 42 palace 42 results | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances novels |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,4 | of the code were called novels (leges novellae).[131]~ 2 2,4 | two earlier codes, later novels, and a few other juridical 3 3,5 | the year 534 were called “Novels” (Novellas leges). While 4 3,5 | a great majority of the Novels were drawn up in Greek. 5 3,5 | intention to collect all the Novels in one body, he did not 6 3,5 | private compilations of Novels were made during his reign. 7 3,5 | made during his reign. The Novels are considered the last 8 3,5 | the Institutions, and the Novels, should form one Corpus 9 3,5 | with the exception of the Novels, has been considered primarily 10 3,5 | and Institutions.[56] The Novels of Justinian, as products 11 3,6 | 62] and in one of his Novels he definitely stated that “ 12 3,8 | Justinian’s activity are his Novels, the treatise of John the 13 3,8 | strife is discussed in the Novels and the papyri, as well 14 3,8 | power. One of Justinian’s Novels, blaming the desperate condition 15 3,8 | Emperor, and in one of his Novels he wrote that in view of 16 3,8 | of officials.~ Two great Novels of the year 535 are exceedingly 17 3,8 | very evident from later novels that rebellions, extortion, 18 3,8 | introduced new taxes, though his Novels show clearly that he was 19 3,8 | As evinced by the early Novels, Justinian sincerely intended 20 4,4 | published collection of Novels his period is represented 21 5,3 | of the fifth century. The Novels (Novellae) issued in Greek 22 5,3 | Institutes, Digest, Code, Novels of the Great Justinian, 23 5,3 | Theodosius and Justinian, of the Novels of the latter, and, in recent 24 6 | and a number of famous novels directed against the pernicious 25 6,7 | old laws annulled by later Novels, and to introduce a number 26 6,7 | conditions of life. Some Novels and other legal documents 27 6,7 | including even several Novels of Basil I and Leo VI, were 28 6,7 | Europe.~ Over a hundred novels from the period of Leon 29 6,7 | express through a number of Novels their reaction to one of 30 6,7 | rulers to issue several novels.~ In addition to the Novel 31 6,7 | eleventh century the famous Novels were gradually forgotten 32 7,4 | forced by means of other Novels, as far as possible, to 33 7,4 | Comnenus, who, in one of his novels, declared, “The Christian 34 8,17| dynasty issued their famous novels to defend peasant interests 35 8,17| defend military holdings. The novels of Romanus Lecapenus, Constantine 36 8,17| words, fundamentally these novels reproduced the provision 37 8,17| could not admit. In the novels of Justinian and later emperors 38 8,17| Procopius as well as Justinian’s Novels give the most interesting 39 8,17| Byzantine Empire. This and the Novels reveal the Emperor’s struggle 40 8,17| later. One of Justinian’s novels addressed to the proconsul 41 8,17| considerable size. The famous Novels of the emperors of the Macedonian 42 9,18| Prochiron, the Basilics, the Novels, as well as the Ecloga,