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Alphabetical    [«  »]
particular 54
particularly 119
particulars 1
parties 32
partis 2
partisan 6
partisans 19
Frequency    [«  »]
32 opposition
32 owing
32 pagans
32 parties
32 porphyrogenitus
32 protection
32 purely
A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine empire

IntraText - Concordances

parties

   Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,2 | Origen, but also entire parties, consisting of large, well-organized 2 2,2 | leaders of various religious parties and their congregations 3 2,2 | belonged to different religious parties and were irreconcilable 4 2,3 | the other ecclesiastical parties. Christian exiles of different 5 2,3 | the dissenting religious parties; and (2) the defense of 6 2,3 | the numerous dissenting parties represented at the council 7 2,3 | interests of their respective parties. The first influential favorite 8 2,3 | Besides these two political parties, historians speak of a third 9 2,5 | reconciling the dissenting parties in the church. They proposed 10 2,5 | The number of religious parties increased. Part of the clergy 11 3,8 | competed and struggled with the parties of other colors. They soon 12 3,8 | of the names of the four parties is not very clear. The sources 13 3,8 | gradually changed into political parties expressing various political, 14 3,8 | Theodoric the Great two rival parties, the Greens and the Blues, 15 5,8 | the Christian and pagan parties were responsible for many 16 5,8 | learned man of the period. Two parties formed then in the Byzantine 17 6,7 | harmony to the Empire. Two parties were formed among the Byzantine 18 6,7 | dissension between these two parties spread from the capital 19 6,7 | marriage of Leo the Wise. Both parties remained satisfied by the 20 6,8 | the internal strife of its parties, who frequently appealed 21 7,1 | sumptuous festivities, hunting parties after the western pattern, 22 7,1 | evident. “There were two parties among the crusaders, that 23 7,1 | violent struggle of the court parties as well as the continuing 24 9,2 | to amusements and hunting parties, felt no inclination to 25 9,12| struggle of religious-political parties, the most nmportant of which 26 9,12| irreconcilably opposing parties in the Byzantine church 27 9,12| administration. One of those parties is called in Byzantine sources 28 9,12| the activities of both parties greatly differed. The Russian 29 9,12| representatives of both parties; a historian of that time 30 9,12| said, the struggle of the parties under Michael, “by its feverish 31 9,13| Barlaam and created the parties of the Palamites and Barlaamites, 32 9,13| leaders of the political parties, such as Palaeologus and


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