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Alphabetical [« »] exhortations 1 exhorted 1 exigentes 1 exile 29 exiled 19 exiles 2 exiling 1 | Frequency [« »] 29 distant 29 elected 29 estates 29 exile 29 exists 29 frequent 29 gained | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances exile |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,2 | himself, were subjected to exile and confinement. One of 2 2,2 | followers were recalled from exile.[43] But Arius’ restoration 3 2,2 | sudden death. Their place in exile was taken by the leaders 4 2,2 | their sees and sent into exile. The history of Arian predominance 5 2,2 | the capital as a kind of exile and sometimes called him 6 2,2 | accession an edict recalled from exile all the bishops banished 7 2,2 | religious leaders recalled from exile belonged to different religious 8 2,3 | He sent Eutropius into exile (399 A.D.). But this did 9 2,3 | Emperor to recall him from exile. The new peace between the 10 2,3 | was sent to a new place of exile on the distant eastern shore 11 2,5 | written mainly during his exile, represent an extremely 12 3,7 | else I shall send you into exile,” said Justinian, to which 13 3,8 | is intolerable to be an exile … If you wish, O Emperor, 14 4,2 | Crimea, the usual place of exile for the disgraced in the 15 4,2 | died as a martyr in distant exile.~ ~ ~ 16 5,1 | Nicephorus, and she later died in exile. Nicephorus ascended the 17 5,5 | the emperor’s places of exile for recalcitrant monks. 18 5,8 | who were later sent into exile.~ Michael I Rangabé ruled 19 5,8 | Studites were recalled from exile.~ A quarter of a century 20 5,8 | worshiped them died either in exile or in battle. Only those 21 5,8 | Emperor sent him into distant exile and banished many of his 22 7,1 | the Grand Comneni. “Prince‑exile” of the twelfth century, “ 23 7,1 | was a sort of honorable exile of a dangerous relative. 24 8,2 | of Nicaea, “an Empire in exile,” was Theodore Lascaris, 25 8,2 | who had withdrawn into exile before the invading Latins, 26 8,2 | preferring the life of an exile at the palace of a Greek ( 27 8,13| sorry part of an emperor in exile.”[112]~ Thus, the Latin 28 9,3 | revolution of 1282 was a Sicilian exile, Giovanni Procida (Prochida, 29 9,12| Arsenius and sent him into exile, where he died. Arsenius