The History of Greece: From Its Conquest by the Crusaders to Its Conquest by the Turks, and of the Empire of Trebizond: 1204-1461 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 19
Page 32
... Nicephorus Gregoras , 21 . BULGARIANS IN GREECE . 33 SECT . VI . - 32 CHANGES OF THE POPULATION .
... Nicephorus Gregoras , 21 . BULGARIANS IN GREECE . 33 SECT . VI . - 32 CHANGES OF THE POPULATION .
Page 37
... Nicephorus Gregoras call them Illyrians , but Chalcocondylas objects to that name , and thinks they were rather of Macedonian 1 Ptolemæi Geog . , lib . iii . , cap . xiii . § 23 . 2 Auna Comnena , 122 , 165 , 390 . CHAP . I. § 7 ...
... Nicephorus Gregoras call them Illyrians , but Chalcocondylas objects to that name , and thinks they were rather of Macedonian 1 Ptolemæi Geog . , lib . iii . , cap . xiii . § 23 . 2 Auna Comnena , 122 , 165 , 390 . CHAP . I. § 7 ...
Page 39
... Nicephorus Gregoras mentions them as furnishing a body of mariners to the imperial fleets in the time of the Em- peror Michael VIII . Pachymeres notices that they visited Constantinople in such numbers as to form a Tzakonian colony in ...
... Nicephorus Gregoras mentions them as furnishing a body of mariners to the imperial fleets in the time of the Em- peror Michael VIII . Pachymeres notices that they visited Constantinople in such numbers as to form a Tzakonian colony in ...
Page 70
... Nicephorus Gregoras , 25 ; Bonefi- dius , Jus Orientale , 124 . DEFEAT OF SICILIANS . 71 every war in which religious 70 HOSTILITY OF GREEKS AND LATINS .
... Nicephorus Gregoras , 25 ; Bonefi- dius , Jus Orientale , 124 . DEFEAT OF SICILIANS . 71 every war in which religious 70 HOSTILITY OF GREEKS AND LATINS .
Page 149
... Nicephorus were then conquered , and he himself received an appanage in Thrace , and married a daughter of John Cantacuzenos , the usurper of the throne of Constantinople . Nicephorus ... Gregoras , 335 , says he was fourteen in 1339-1340 ...
... Nicephorus were then conquered , and he himself received an appanage in Thrace , and married a daughter of John Cantacuzenos , the usurper of the throne of Constantinople . Nicephorus ... Gregoras , 335 , says he was fourteen in 1339-1340 ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Acciaiuoli administration Albanian Alexios army attack Baldwin barons Boniface Brienne brother Buchon Bulgarians Byzantine empire Byzantine government Cantacuzenos Catalans century Chalcocondylas Champlitte CHAP Christian Chronicle church clergy compelled conquered conquest Constantine Constantinople Corinth Crusaders daughter Demetrius despot of Epirus districts dominions duke of Athens edit emperor of Romania emperor of Trebizond empire of Romania empire of Trebizond Fallmerayer feudal fiefs force fortress Franks French Geffrey Greece Greek Greek emperor Hellenic Histoire imperial inhabitants Joannes John kingdom land Latin Manuel married Michael military Misithra Mohammed Monemvasia Morea nations Nerio Nicæa Nicephorus Nicephorus Gregoras Nicetas nobles Normans occupied Othoman papal Patras Peloponnesus Phrantzes plunder political Pope possession prince of Achaia principality provinces race received reign republic Roman Saloniki Sclavonians SECT Seljouk Sicily slaves society sovereign sultan territory Thebes Theodore Thessalonica Thessaly throne tion treaty Trebizond troops Turkish Turks Vallachian vassals Venetians Villehardoin wealth William
Popular passages
Page 523 - COQUET-DALE FISHING SONGS. Now first collected by a North-Country Angler, with the Music of the Airs. 8vo, 5s.
Page 452 - ... the Ganges to Damascus and the Archipelago, Asia was in the hand of Timour ; his armies were invincible, his ambition was boundless, and his zeal might aspire to conquer and convert the Christian kingdoms of the West, which already trembled at his name. He touched the utmost verge of the land ; but an insuperable though narrow sea rolled between the two continents of Europe and Asia, and the lord of so many tomans, or myriads of horse, was not master of a single galley.
Page 494 - In concluding the history of this Greek state, we inquire in vain for any benefit that it conferred on the human race.