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Alphabetical [« »] rushed 9 russia 63 russian 154 russians 30 rustic 1 ruthless 3 ruthlessly 1 | Frequency [« »] 30 points 30 popes 30 read 30 russians 30 show 30 spoke 30 treatise | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances russians |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 5,8| victory in the north over the Russians in 860-61 left an equally 2 5,8| attack of the “Ros,” or the Russians, upon Constantinople. Until 3 5,8| very exact information: the Russians approached Constantinople 4 5,8| this first attack of the Russians at the end of 859 or early 5 5,8| this event, referred to the Russians as the “Scythian, coarse 6 5,8| the first attack of the Russians on Constantinople in the 7 6 | the Arabs, Bulgarians, and Russians, was crowned with brilliant 8 6,2| the end of Leo’s reign the Russians stood near Constantinople. 9 6,2| spoke of the presence of 700 Russians.[9]~ Thus the Byzantine 10 6,2| hundred and twenty-nine Russians were among the Byzantine 11 6,3| form an alliance with the Russians, the Patzinaks, the Alans, 12 6,3| directed his forces against the Russians under the pretext of defending 13 6,4| trade privileges for the Russians.[57]~ The famous history 14 6,4| chronicle), which permits the Russians, if they should so desire, 15 6,4| the Bosphorus. Here the Russians pillaged the seacoast and 16 6,4| large army of “Varangians, Russians, Poliane, Slavs, Krivichi, 17 6,4| following year the Greeks and Russians negotiated a treaty on conditions 18 6,4| conditions less favorable to the Russians than those of Oleg. This 19 6,4| Scythian merchants” (i.e., Russians) in Constantinople and the 20 6,4| the last undertaken by the Russians against Constantinople in 21 6,5| Empire’s relations with the Russians, Magyars, and Bulgarians. 22 6,5| the Empire, neither the Russians, nor the Magyars, nor the 23 6,7| endeavored to convert the Russians to Christianity, but very 24 6,7| that Basil persuaded the Russians “to take part in salutary 25 6,7| difficult to determine which Russians the writer of this source 26 6,8| peoples, the Patzinaks, Russians, Uzes, Khazars, Magyars ( 27 7,1| in all probability, the Russians as well as the Cumans took 28 7,1| This struggle between the Russians and Polovtzi — a struggle 29 7,1| barbarous infidels. “Had the Russians thought of taking the cross,” 30 7,4| on him. Under Manuel the Russians who had formerly lived on