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  1. Apr 29, 2022 · Some of the foremost figures of the revival of Greek studies, including Pallas Strozzi (1372–1462) and Guarino da Verona (1374–1460), were among his pupils. 6 A similar example is John Argyropoulos (d. 1487) who probably first went to Italy in 1438–9 as part of the Byzantine delegation to the Council of Ferrara–Florence. 7 He was ...

  2. Aug 18, 2020 · It was during his patriarchate that the Sixth Ecumenical Synod took place in 680 in Constantinople, at which time Monothelitism was condemned. He was succeeded, after a one-year bishopric and interlude of a reign by Patriarch Theodore I of Constantinople, by Paul III of Constantinople.

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  4. Jan 28, 2020 · In order to settle these plans, a papal envoy was sent to Constantinople, whose tasks included, in addition to political ones, reconciliation with Patriarch Michael, naturally on conditions favorable to Leo.

    • Why did John George I send envoys to Constantinople?1
    • Why did John George I send envoys to Constantinople?2
    • Why did John George I send envoys to Constantinople?3
    • Why did John George I send envoys to Constantinople?4
  5. Most scholars seem to accept that it is a building specifically for lodging foreign envoys, but it might also have been a bureau responsible for tending to foreign envoys. Interestingly, I havent been able to find a primary source describing housing anyone in the apokrisiarieion, although absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.

  6. Although the Venetian representatives at Lyon had vociferously protested that Venice still claimed its rights in 'Romania', the advantage lay with Palaiologos, and the new Doge, Jacopo Contarini, in 1276 sent envoys to Constantinople to renegotiate the 1268 treaty.

  7. 3 Ibid. iii.52; Letters of Gregory the Great, 3.52.Studies of Pope Gregory i in English include Bronwen Neil and Matthew Dal Santo (eds), A companion to Gregory the Great, Leiden 2013; John Moorhead, Gregory the Great, London 2005; R. A. Markus, Gregory the Great and his world, Cambridge 1997, and Gregory the Great: a symposium, South Bend 1995; Carol Straw, Gregory the Great: perfection in ...

  8. After the dormition of the Mother of God, St. Andrew began his final journey from Jerusalem. The trail of tradition says that he went back to Pontus, then to Georgia, to the Caucuses, and to the Sea of Azov in southern Russia. From there he went to Donets, to the Crimea, up the Dnepr River to Kiev and to the Scythians of the Ukraine. In the Crimea, where he stayed with the Greeks of Sebastopol ...

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