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Üçayak: a forgotten Byzantine church

Byzantinische Zeitschrift, 2014
AbstractThe imposing ruins of a Byzantine church known as Üçayak, situated in the vicinity of the city of Kırşehir in central Anatolia, on the border between the historic Byzantine provinces of Galatia and Cappadocia, exhibit several conspicuous architectural features.
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The Nativity Drama of the Byzantine Church

Journal of Roman Studies, 1947
The service books of the Eastern Church contain a large number of monostrophic hymns, or Troparia, which originally followed a verse (στἰχος) from a psalm or canticle, and were therefore also called Stichera. As hymnography developed, their connexion with the content of the Stichos was loosened, and their number increased.
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Church, Ostuni, and: Byzantine

North Dakota Quarterly, 2023
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A Church of the Iconoclast (?) Period in Byzantine Isauria

Anatolian Studies, 1957
The rock-cut church of Al Oda (the Red Room) does not seem to have been visited in the past by any European traveller. In September, 1953, on the advice of Bay Neşri Atlay, then headmaster of the Primary School at Mut, a party consisting of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Gough, Mr. Michael Ballance and Mr.
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Italian Middle Byzantine Churches: A Comparison Through Masonry Quality Analysis

International Journal of Architectural Heritage, 2021
Antonella Manzo   +2 more
exaly  

The Music of the Byzantine Church

Notes, 1960
Milos Velimirovic, Egon Wellesz
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Byzantine Church at Kafr Kama

2022
Nurit Feig, Mordechai Aviam
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A Byzantine Church at Kafr Kama

2015
no ...
Saarisalo, Aapeli, Palva, Heikki
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Early Islam and Byzantine Churches

2021
The territories conquered at Byzantium’s expense by the Muslim armies in the seventh century were largely inhabited by Christians. During the three centuries before the arrival of the Muslims, the sacred landscape of the regions overlooking the Mediterranean was radically transformed through a dense construction of Christian architectural complexes ...
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Sanctuary and Nave in the Early Byzantine Church

1963
In its essential features Early Christian architecture was a reflection of past history rather than contemporary dogma. St John Lateran and St Peter, two of the first, as well as the most important churches to be erected by Constantine in Rome, were planned on the lines of earlier Greco-Roman basilicas.
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