History of the Byzantine Empire, Volum 1Blackwood, 1853 |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-5 av 19
Side ix
... Ignatius and Photius , General council in 861 , 203 206 207 Origin of Papal authority in the church , 211 214 Bulgarian war , · Saracen war , 218 220 • Victory of Petronas , Russians attack Constantinople , State of the court ...
... Ignatius and Photius , General council in 861 , 203 206 207 Origin of Papal authority in the church , 211 214 Bulgarian war , · Saracen war , 218 220 • Victory of Petronas , Russians attack Constantinople , State of the court ...
Side 134
... Ignatius , and forced into a monas- tery . Ignatius became Patriarch of Constantinople in the reign of Michael III.1 - SECT . III . — LEO V. ( THE ARMENIAN , ) A.D.2 813-820 . POLICY OF LEO - TREACHEROUS ATTACK ON CRUMN - VICTORY OVER ...
... Ignatius , and forced into a monas- tery . Ignatius became Patriarch of Constantinople in the reign of Michael III.1 - SECT . III . — LEO V. ( THE ARMENIAN , ) A.D.2 813-820 . POLICY OF LEO - TREACHEROUS ATTACK ON CRUMN - VICTORY OVER ...
Side 135
... Ignatius far out- weighs every other . Schlosser , 391. Neander , iii . 532. The Emperor Leo doubtless made the customary general declaration of orthodoxy contained in the coronation oath , which had appeared so vague as to require the ...
... Ignatius far out- weighs every other . Schlosser , 391. Neander , iii . 532. The Emperor Leo doubtless made the customary general declaration of orthodoxy contained in the coronation oath , which had appeared so vague as to require the ...
Side 153
... Ignatius , ( Concil . Labb . viii . 1183 , ) says he was of the Sabbatian heresy . Some moderns wish to make both the emperor and the Athingans gypseys without any reason . A. D. 820-829 . BOOK I. his reign , he held a silention to ...
... Ignatius , ( Concil . Labb . viii . 1183 , ) says he was of the Sabbatian heresy . Some moderns wish to make both the emperor and the Athingans gypseys without any reason . A. D. 820-829 . BOOK I. his reign , he held a silention to ...
Side 204
... Ignatius to give them the veil . After her banishment from the imperial palace , Theodora still hoped to recover her influence with her son , if she could separate him from Bardas ; and she engaged in intrigues with her brother's ...
... Ignatius to give them the veil . After her banishment from the imperial palace , Theodora still hoped to recover her influence with her son , if she could separate him from Bardas ; and she engaged in intrigues with her brother's ...
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
administration Amorium Armenian Asia Minor attack Bagdat Bardas Basil Basil II bishops BOOK Bulgarian Byzan Byzantine army Byzantine empire Byzantine government Byzantine troops caliph capital Cedrenus Cherson Christian church civilisation clergy command compelled conduct conquest Constantine Constantine IX Constantine Porphyrogenitus Constantinople council court death defeated Eastern Empire ecclesiastical edit emperor empress enemy eunuchs favour fleet frontier gold governor Greece Greek historians Iconoclasts Ignatius image-worship imperial inhabitants invaded Irene John Leo Diaconus Leo's Maniakes Michael Michael III military Mohammedans monastery monks nations Nicephorus Nicephorus II Niketas officers orthodox palace papal Patriarch Patzinaks Paulicians Phokas Photius plunder political Pope population Porphyr Porphyrogenitus possession prince prisoners provinces rank ravages rebellion reign rendered Roman Romanus III Rome Russians Saracens Sclavonian sent Sicily Skleros slaves society sovereign stantinople Symeon Mag theme Theodora Theophanes Theophilus Thessalonica Thrace throne tion Varangian victory wealth Zimiskes Zonaras
Populære avsnitt
Side 532 - But if the priest buy any soul with his money, he shall eat of it, and he that is born in his house : they shall eat of his meat.
Side 242 - Iconoclast sovereigns lived at the end of the eighth and the beginning of the ninth century: the Patriarch Nicephorus and the monk Theophanes.
Side 472 - CHESNEY— THE EXPEDITION FOR THE SURVEY OF THE RIVERS EUPHRATES and TIGRIS, carried on by order of the British Government, in the Years 1835, 1836, and 1837.
Side 10 - From these considerations I should have abandoned without regret the Greek slaves and their servile historians, had I not reflected that the fate of the Byzantine monarchy is passively connected with the most splendid and important revolutions which have changed the state of the world.
Side 142 - He that is so impoverished that he hath no oblation chooseth a tree that will not rot; He seeketh unto him a cunning workman To prepare a graven image, that shall not be moved.
Side 10 - The contest concerning image-worship, from the prevalence of ecclesiastical ideas, became the expression of this struggle. Its object was as much to consolidate the supremacy of the imperial authority, as to purify the practice of the church. The emperors wished to constitute themselves the fountains of ecclesiastical as completely as of civil legislation.
Side 12 - I. (Coranenus) in 1057, to the conquest of the Byzantine empire by the Crusaders, in 1204. This is the true period of the decline and fall of the Eastern Empire. It commenced by a rebellion of the great nobles of Asia, who effected an internal revolution in the Byzantine empire by wrenching the administration out of the hands of well-trained officials, and destroying the responsibility created by systematic procedure.
Side 106 - This circumstance had brought about regular exchanges of prisoners as early as the reign of Constantine V., AD 769 -. In the year 797, a new clause was inserted in a treaty for the exchange of prisoners, binding the contracting parties to release all supernumerary captives, on the payment of a fixed sum for each individual 3.
Side 112 - ... (Finlay, ii. p. 97). Nicephorus "eagerly pursued the centralizing policy of his iconoclast predecessors, and strove to render the civil power supreme over the clergy and the Church. He forbade the Patriarch to hold any communications with the Pope, whom he considered as the Patriarch of Charlemagne ; and this prudent measure has caused much of the virulence with which his memory has been attacked by ecclesiastical and orthodox historians.
Side 48 - Constantinople2, he does not appear to have adopted any measures for declaring Rome independent. That he contemplated the possibility of events taking a turn that might ultimately lead him to throw off his allegiance to the Emperor Leo, is nevertheless evident, from one of his letters to that emperor, in which he boasts very significantly that the eyes of the West were fixed on his humility, and that if Leo attempted to injure the Pope, he would find the West ready to defend him, and even to attack...