History of the Byzantine Empire: From MLVII to MCCCCLIII. 1854Blackwood, 1854 |
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Side 4
... imperial secretary charged with the correspondence of the par- ticular department to which the affair in question night relate ; and , consequently , subserviency to power became the surest means of advancing the fortunes of all public ...
... imperial secretary charged with the correspondence of the par- ticular department to which the affair in question night relate ; and , consequently , subserviency to power became the surest means of advancing the fortunes of all public ...
Side 5
... imperial household . These domestics carried on the work of political change by filling the public offices with their own creatures , and thereby destroying the power of that body of state offi- cials , whose admirable organisation had ...
... imperial household . These domestics carried on the work of political change by filling the public offices with their own creatures , and thereby destroying the power of that body of state offi- cials , whose admirable organisation had ...
Side 6
... imperial government by its predecessors . Basil II . was the last emperor of the East who had a really Roman policy , and his views were confined too exclusively to military affairs . Circumstances henceforward directed the pro- gress ...
... imperial government by its predecessors . Basil II . was the last emperor of the East who had a really Roman policy , and his views were confined too exclusively to military affairs . Circumstances henceforward directed the pro- gress ...
Side 15
... imperial palace . His life was for some time in danger ; and believing himself to be on the point of death , he assumed the monastic garb , and selected as his successor Constantine Ducas , the man he deemed best able to restore order ...
... imperial palace . His life was for some time in danger ; and believing himself to be on the point of death , he assumed the monastic garb , and selected as his successor Constantine Ducas , the man he deemed best able to restore order ...
Side 18
... imperial army might have repulsed the Seljouk Turks from the fortified cities of Armenia , and secured the indepen- dence of the Christian tribes who occupied the laby- rinths of the Caucasian and Armenian mountains , thereby preventing ...
... imperial army might have repulsed the Seljouk Turks from the fortified cities of Armenia , and secured the indepen- dence of the Christian tribes who occupied the laby- rinths of the Caucasian and Armenian mountains , thereby preventing ...
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Acropolita administration Adrianople Alexius Alp Arslan Andronicus Anna Comnena Antioch Armenian Asia Minor attack besieged Bohemund BOOK brother Bulgarians Byzantine army Byzantine empire byzants Cæsar camp Cantacuzenos capital Catalans cavalry Christian Cinnamus clergy command compelled conduct conquest Constan Constantine Constantinople court Crusaders defeated defend Despot Despot of Epirus Didymoteichos dominions Ducange Ducas Dyrrachium ecclesiastical Emperor John enemy Epirus Europe favour fleet force gained galleys garrison Genoese Greek church Greek empire honour hostile Iconium imperial inhabitants intrigues Isaac king king of Bulgaria Latin Manuel mercenaries Michael military Murad Nicæa Nicephorus Gregoras Nicephorus III Nicetas nobles Orkhan Othoman Pachymeres palace Paleologos Patriarch Patzinaks Phrantzes plundered political Pope population possession prince prisoner provinces rebel reign rendered Roman Romanus IV Sclavonian Seljouk sent Servian siege soldiers soon stantinople sultan Sultan of Iconium Theodore Thessalonica thousand Thrace throne tion treaty troops Turkish Turks Vallachians Venetians walls
Populære avsnitt
Side 234 - ... made an attempt to fly from the summit of the Theatre. He was dashed to pieces in spite of his artificial wings, to the great amusement of the mob. Nicetas. 78. In the reign of James IV. an Italian visited Scotland, and the king made him Abbot of Tungland in Galloway for his supposed skill in alchemy. He pretended that he could fly, and made an attempt from the walls of Stirling Castle ; but his wings failed him, and he fell to the ground and broke his thigh-bone. The abbot accounted for his...
Side 626 - December 1452. The court and the great body of the dignified clergy ratified the act by their presence ; but the monks and the people repudiated the connection. In their opinion, the church of St. Sophia was polluted by the ceremony, and from that day it was deserted by the orthodox. The historian Ducas declares that they looked upon it as a haunt of demons, and no better than a pagan...
Side 625 - Kief, who had joined the Latin church, as his legate. Isidore had represented the Russian church at the council of Florence ; but on his return to Russia he was imprisoned as an apostate, and with difficulty escaped to Italy. He was by birth a Greek ; and being a man of learning and conciliatory manners, it was expected that he would be favourably received at Constantinople. The cardinal arrived at Constantinople in November 1452. He was accompanied by a small body of chosen troops, and brought some...