Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] designs 2 desirability 1 desirable 4 desire 41 desired 17 desires 6 desiring 3 | Frequency [« »] 42 thought 42 whether 41 bishops 41 desire 41 failure 41 hostilities 41 including | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances desire |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,1 | high ambitions and a strong desire for power, a man who sacrificed 2 2,2 | soul. And not only did he desire to gaze intently at the 3 3,5 | of the compiler but to a desire to adapt Roman law to living 4 3,6 | were concerned.”[59] In his desire to be full master of the 5 3,6 | his Caesaropapism was a desire to make secure his political 6 3,14| exarch, who, granting the desire and the presence of certain 7 3,15| other extreme because of his desire to reduce the significance 8 4,1 | we properly analyze the desire on the part of Constans 9 4,3 | Constantinople had abandoned the desire to find a path for religious 10 4,4 | enemy has always been the desire of all true statesmen.”[ 11 5,4 | worldly affairs by a sincere desire to follow higher ideals. 12 5,8 | oppressors, the landowners, in a desire to build a better and brighter 13 5,8 | learning and science. In his desire to outrival the glories 14 6,4 | Russians, if they should so desire, to serve in the army of 15 6,7 | party, as well as by Leo’s desire to raise his brother Stephen 16 6,7 | order, through our rightful desire of freedom and the sharpness 17 6,7 | became very great and the desire to deal the powerful a heavy 18 6,7 | the powerful and by his desire to find a way for reconciliation 19 7,1 | population; and a vigorous desire to change the system arose. 20 7,1 | Thus, their idealistic desire to aid the eastern Christians 21 7,1 | were urged on by the real desire of worshipping at our Lord’ 22 7,1 | eleventh century. Only one desire was overwhelmingly prevalent 23 7,1 | the westerners, full of desire to pillage and spoil, were 24 7,1 | was certainly not only the desire of taking revenge for the 25 7,2 | and Bulgarians, and their desire for independence. The time 26 7,2 | title and expressing the desire to be “forever a man (i.e., 27 7,3 | crusade were mingled with the desire for adventure and gain, 28 7,3 | had obvious motives: the desire to subdue Zara, which had 29 7,4 | accordance with the Emperor’s desire Zigabenus drew up a treatise 30 7,4 | Hadrian IV expressed his desire “to help in bringing all 31 8,10| Epirus Frederick wrote: “We desire to defend not only our own 32 8,10| Frederick wrote further: “We desire to do or undertake nothing 33 8,13| one truth, one goal, one desire — to gather together the 34 8,14| Accordingly he did not desire a patriarch of great energy 35 9,3 | willingly inclined to the desire of the Emperor, not only 36 9,3 | but because of his sincere desire to establish ecclesiastical 37 9,5 | corner of the peninsula. The desire of taking possession of 38 9,6 | government, and finally, the desire of the majority of the population 39 9,9 | man of genius.[200] The desire to conquer Constantinople 40 9,13| heart, and mind, and the desire for divine contemplation 41 9,19| country, he yielded to his desire to return to Italy, the