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. Mango, C. 2007 7 The Art of the Byzantine Empire, 312–1453. Sources and Documents. Toronto-Buffalo-London. Mango C. The Art of the Byzantine Empire
. Szeged . Curta , Florin 2002 Limes and cross: The religious dimension of sixth-century Danube Frontier of the Early-Byzantine Empire . Starinar ( Beograd ) 51 , 45 – 70 . Curta , Florin 2005 Before Cyril and Methodius: Christianity and
) Les personnages byzantins de l’Alexiade. Analyse prosopographique et synthèse . Louvain Treu , M . ( 1892 ) Ein Kritiker des Timarion . Byzantinische Zeitschrift , 1 : 361 – 365 . Vasiliev , A. A . ( 1964 ) History of the Byzantine Empire II
Chalcocondyles Latinus •
Konrad Clauser's translation of Chalkokondyles
Niketas Choniates. 32 The aim of the series was to provide a coherent overview of the history of the Byzantine Empire through selected Byzantine historical works, in the form of a historia continua of sorts. Wolf filled the chronological gap in the
depth and intensity of the Byzantine Empire's diplomatic contacts with Eurasia have been a matter of controversy in historic studies. Mark Whittow, 18 who has tragically left us, makes a convincing case for the existence of a Byzantine Eurasia policy
The Archaeology of Power in Lombard Female Burials in Central-Northern Italy. •
Marriage, Integration, Grave Goods and Status Symbols
, northern European-Scandinavian territories and the areas of the neighbouring Byzantine Empire. Within the context of the mobility of groups of people and individuals, women were subject to matrimonial dynamics that could lead a Lombard woman to travel far
) 417 – 441 . Luttwak 2009 E. Luttwak : The Grand Strategy of the Byzantine Empire . Cambridge, Mass—London 2009 . Мамаев 2014 Х. М. Мамаев : «Княжеское» п огребение У г.Магас (Ингушетия) [A princely burial near the town of Magas (Ingushetia
fel, a tölgyfa ugyanis Zeusz kedvelt fája (D & Ch VI, 8–21). 5 A. P. Kazhdan: Bemerkungen zu Niketas Eugenianos. JÖB 16 (1967) 113. 6 S. MacAlister: Dreams and Suicides. The Greek Novel from Antiquity to the Byzantine Empire. London (1994) 310. 7
was used for highlighting in ancient manuscripts, and in the Byzantine Empire only the emperor was entitled to use it. In Hungary it first appeared during the reign of King Béla IV. (1235–1270). 41 It was made from both minium 42 and cinnabar 43
detailed information on Avar mounted warriors can be found in the so-called Strategikon , 9 a Byzantine military handbook attributed to the Byzantine Emperor Maurice, who ruled the Byzantine Empire from 582 to 602