Results 11 to 20 of about 9,047 (143)
New “Russian Translation” of the Treatise “De Adminstrando Imperio” Amid Its Contemporary Studies
Introduction. The article is a critical essay about an attempt to translate the Constantine’s treatise “De Administrando Imperio” into an artificially archaic “Pseudo-Slavic” language, made by R.A. Gimadeev. It is shown that his commentaries accompanying
Aleksei S. Shchavelev
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Porphyrogenitus` borders on Ister and Hungarian conquest period finds in Vojvodina [PDF]
Data from De administrando imperio covers Hungarian conquest, right after their arrival to the Carpathian plain and to the territories they settled.
Radičević Dejan, Špehar Perica
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Early church of the middle Byzantine period and the relics of St. Tryphon in Kotor [PDF]
Based on data contained in Constantine Porphyrogenitus’s De Administrando Imperio, local written sources, and fragments with inscriptions, the article offers new insight about the original position of the relics of St.
Stevović Ivan
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On the Serbian-Bulgarian border in the 9th and the 10th centuries [PDF]
The paper analyzes the information concerning the border between the Serbs and the Bulgarians in the 9th and the 10th centuries found in the work De administrando imperio by the emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus.
Komatina Predrag
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The present text aims to reflect on the reliability of Constantine Porphyrogenitus’ account about the departure of Časlav, a Serbian prince, from Bulgaria at the beginning of the reign of Peter I, the successor of Symeon.
Mirosław J. Leszka
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On the attempts to locate the “inhabited cities” of porphyrogennetos’ Pagania a historiographic overview with special reference to controversial issues [PDF]
In this paper there was made an attempt at determining more precisely the location of the four “inhabited cities” (κάστρα οíκούμενα) of Pagania, mentioned in the De administrando imperio of Constantine Porphyrogennetos: Mokron (τò Μόκρον ...
Marković Miodrag
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The paper endeavours to discuss anew a scholarly puzzle related to the Croatian early Middle Ages and centred on a few lines from Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos’s De administrando imperio, which in English translation are as follows: And of the Croats ...
Hrvoje Gračanin
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Garum or Grain? Crimea and the Provisioning of Constantinople (7th to 9th centuries)
Historians have relied for too long on written sources (the letters that Pope Martin I wrote from Cherson, as well as De Administrando Imperio) to assess the economic situation in the Crimea, especially in Cherson, during the so-called Dark Ages (7th to ...
Florin Curta
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Introduction. The article aims to compare two texts concerning byzantine diplomatic practices of the mid 10th century. The first one is described in the 13th chapter of the treatise “De Administrando Imperio”, in which its author Constantine VII ...
Aleksey S. Shchavelev
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The oldest elements of the Serbian statehood [PDF]
Starting from the Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus' work De Administrando Imperio, where he wrote that after the death of a Serbian archon, the rule over the people was shared between his two sons, it is assumed that the Serbs were then a nomadic, animal ...
Đekić Đorđe N.
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