Chapter
1 1 | pretended. His ancestors were Christian Skipetars, who became Mussulmans
2 2 | was hatred of the name of Christian, and whose sole means of
3 2 | Peneus of a multitude of Christian chiefs who exercised more
4 2 | the bands of Armatolis, or Christian militia, which infested
5 3 | been forcibly taken from a Christian, and the idea of a pious
6 3 | professed a rude pantheism, a Christian among the Greeks, with whom
7 3 | summoned to his aid the Christian chiefs of the mountains,
8 3 | the harem, praying as a Christian both for the murderer and
9 4 | ladies belonging to the best Christian families in Janina. A Wallachian,
10 5 | away, and, calling on the Christian Mirdites who served under
11 5 | enjoy the spectacle. The Christian Mirdites and the Mohammedan
12 6 | greedily coveted. Agia, a small Christian town on the coast, had rebelled
13 7 | freedom in the hands of a Christian nation rather than to fall
14 7 | bitterly, and appealed to Christian Europe, which remained deaf
15 7 | prolong the agony; now, a Christian accused of having tried
16 7 | Arta, a wealthy town with a Christian population, was ravaged
17 7 | him in his vengeance, a Christian from OEtolia, Paleopoulo
18 8 | at the execution of the Christian martyr; the holy bishop
19 8 | different impressions on the Christian priests and archons. Some
20 9 | position. Mussulman and Christian alike, all the inhabitants
21 9 | Basillisa, the beautiful Christian captive, who had now been
22 9 | because, being born of a Christian mother, he had been brought
23 10| was received as well as a Christian from whom there was now
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