MonographDOI
Chronicon Paschale 284-628 AD
Michael Whitby,Mary Whitby +1 more
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The chronicle and its context, sources, interests, translation "Chronicon Paschale" - translation and notes as mentioned in this paper, the terminal date of CP the great chronographer Ericcson's postulated textual transposition the date of Heraclius' encounter with the AvarsAbstract:
Introduction - the chronicle and its context, sources, interests, translation "Chronicon Paschale" - translation and notes. Appendices: the terminal date of CP the great chronographer Ericcson's postulated textual transposition the date of Heraclius' encounter with the Avars.read more
Citations
More filters
Book
Earthquakes in the Mediterranean and Middle East: A Multidisciplinary Study of Seismicity up to 1900
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an evaluation of macroseismic data and a Catalogue of earthquakes and a long-term seismicity evaluation of instrumental data, as well as future challenges in the field of seismology.
Art and architecture
TL;DR: In the provinces the architectural and art forms characteristic of the Flavian era continued to flourish as mentioned in this paper and Dynamism returned to imperial commissions with the Romano-Spanish Trajan, who was able to impress upon it his own many-sided personality: ruler, philhellene, architect, dilettante, poet, traveller and romantic.
Book
There is no crime for those who have Christ
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a list of abbreviations for the Church: 1. "What Has the Emperor to Do with the Church?" Persecution and Martyrdom from Diocletian to Constantine 2. "The God of the Martyrs Refuses You": Religious Violence, Political Discourse, and Christian Identity in the Century after Constantine 3. An Eye for an Eye: Religious Violence in Donatist Africa 4. Temperata Severitas: Augustine, the State, and Disciplinary Violence 5. "There Is No Crime for Those Who Have Christ": Holy
Journal ArticleDOI
Rome, Ravenna and the last western emperors
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an evidenza relativa alle residenze degli imperatori d'Occidente tra il 401 and the 476 anni.