Memory, tradition, and Christianization of the Peloponnese [PDF]
This work examines the use of memory and tradition in the Christianization of the Peloponnese based on the evidence of the location and topography of churches.
Sweetman, Rebecca Jane
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Stall‐Free Asynchronous State Repartitioning With a Proactive Workload Tracking Window
ABSTRACT High‐throughput stateful applications rely on dynamic data repartitioning to adapt to changing workloads, but this process presents significant challenges. This paper provides a detailed analysis of such challenges, drilling down into the tradeoffs between adaptation, computational overhead, and service availability. We identify that a primary
Douglas Pereira Luiz +1 more
wiley +1 more source
The Early Byzantine Cemetery of Bosporos
Byzantine Emperor Justinian I (527–565) annexed the city of Bosporos in 528. In the Early Byzantine period, the city cemetery of Bosporos occupied Mitridat hill sides.
Aleksandr Il’ish Aibabin +1 more
doaj +1 more source
Remarks on the Letter of the Patriarch Theophylact to Tsar Peter in the Context of Certain Byzantine and Slavic Anti-heretic Texts [PDF]
Translated by Marek MajerThe Letter of patriarch Theophylact to tsar Peter is the oldest, but seemingly not the most informative Greek source for the history of Bogomilism.
Mintchev, Gueorgui
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Mills and society in early medieval northern Italy
Drawing on the extensive documentary record of northern Italy, available archaeological evidence, and comparative case studies from early medieval Europe, this study demonstrates that mill‐based landscapes in the Po and Friuli‐Venetian plains were shaped by society as a whole.
Marco Panato
wiley +1 more source
“Collar Amphorae” of the Type Gunsenin II from a Byzantine Shipwreck at Balaklava
Byzantine Emperor Justinian I (527–565) annexed the city of Bosporos in 528. In the Early Byzantine period, the city cemetery of Bosporos occupied Mitridat hill sides.
Nataliya Vitalievna Ginkut +1 more
doaj +1 more source
“Through Thick and Thin” How Black Educators Support Urban Students' Postsecondary Plans
How does exposure to Black educators influence minority students' postsecondary planning processes and long‐run educational ambitions? Prior studies have documented positive effects of student‐teacher racial matches on achievement and non‐academic outcomes, but quantitative research designs are often unable to uncover the mechanisms underlying these ...
Joseph Sageman
wiley +1 more source
Leguminous plants were a crucially important element in the Mediterranean diet, and, as such, these plants were second only to cereals. It is also important to note that according to medical writings preserved from antiquity and the early Byzantine ...
Maciej Kokoszko +2 more
doaj +1 more source
The slav reception of Gregory of Nyssa’s works: an overview of early slavonic translations [PDF]
Although a lot has been written about the "translatio" of Byzantine Christianity in the mediaeval Slavia orthodoxa, advancing a critical assessment of the Slav reception of the Greek Fathers remains a precarious undertaking.
Sels, Lara
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The competition for souls: Sava of Serbia and consumer choice in religion in the thirteenth century Balkans [PDF]
SUMMARY The word αίρεσις , heresy means choice and in a world where religious belief was taken for granted the history of Catharism in Europe can be explained through believers exercising many of the criteria they were later to adapt to choosing secular
Roach, A.P.
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