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Byzantine Art and Diplomacy in an Age of Decline
2014The Late Byzantine period (1261–1453) is marked by a paradoxical discrepancy between economic weakness and cultural strength. The apparent enigma can be resolved by recognizing that later Byzantine diplomatic strategies, despite or because of diminishing political advantage, relied on an increasingly desirable cultural and artistic heritage.
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Full Text Book of Rimar Congress 4, 2022
The importance of studying the subject is one of the important topics in the history of the Arabs before Islam because it was the source of the impact that Emperor Justinian I (527-565 AD) followed in changing the course of historical events towards the borders, which were of great importance to its course, as the diplomatic methods it pursued in ...
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The importance of studying the subject is one of the important topics in the history of the Arabs before Islam because it was the source of the impact that Emperor Justinian I (527-565 AD) followed in changing the course of historical events towards the borders, which were of great importance to its course, as the diplomatic methods it pursued in ...
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Byzantine Belts and Avar Birds Diplomacy, Trade and Cultural Transfer in the Eighth Century
2001exaly +2 more sources
Byzantine-Arab Diplomacy in the Near East From the Islamic Conquests to the Mid Eleventh Century 1
2017Arab sources say that mosaic workers and materials were sent by the Byzantine emperors to help in the decoration of mosques in Medina and Damascus, where the surviving eighth-century mosaics may be the tangible proof of this cultural interchange. Support is lent by the much better documented despatch of Byzantine mosaicists to help in the decoration of
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2012
This chapter investigates how the Muslim community's qurʾānic orientation impacted its relationship with the Christian Byzantine Empire during the reign of the ʿAbbāsid Caliph al-Ma ʾmūn, through a study of the rhetorical use of the Qurʾān in al-Ma ʾmūn’s letter to the Byzantine Emperor Theophilus.
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This chapter investigates how the Muslim community's qurʾānic orientation impacted its relationship with the Christian Byzantine Empire during the reign of the ʿAbbāsid Caliph al-Ma ʾmūn, through a study of the rhetorical use of the Qurʾān in al-Ma ʾmūn’s letter to the Byzantine Emperor Theophilus.
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Functions of the Scribones in the Context of Byzantine Diplomacy in the 540s – 580s
Ethnic History of European NationsRelevance. The intensification of the Byzantine Empire’s foreign policy during the reign of Justinian I (527–565) was accompanied by the formation of new specialized units, among which the scribones held a distinctive place. Studying their role is crucial for understanding the evolution of the early Byzantine military-administrative and diplomatic ...
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History Compass, 2015
Abstract When it comes to diplomatic relations, the phrase “too close for comfort” perfectly describes the relationship between the medieval Byzantine and Bulgarian states in the Balkan peninsula. In the early 10th century, shortly after Bulgaria's conversion to the Eastern rite of Christianity, the two states engaged in a bloody and ...
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Abstract When it comes to diplomatic relations, the phrase “too close for comfort” perfectly describes the relationship between the medieval Byzantine and Bulgarian states in the Balkan peninsula. In the early 10th century, shortly after Bulgaria's conversion to the Eastern rite of Christianity, the two states engaged in a bloody and ...
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The <i>dromos</i> and Byzantine Communications, Diplomacy, and Bureaucracy, 518–1204
exaly +2 more sourcesByzantine diplomacy, A.D. 1204—1453: means and ends
2023Nicolas Oikonomides +1 more
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