The Cambridge Ancient HistoryAveril Cameron, Peter Garnsey Cambridge University Press, 1998 - 905 من الصفحات With Volume 13, the new edition of The Cambridge Ancient History moves into fresh territory. The first edition was completed by Volume 12, which closed in AD 324. The editors of the new edition have enlarged the scope of Volume 12 to include the foundation of Constantinople and the death of Constantine, and extended the series with two wholly new volumes taking the History up to AD 600. Volume 13, the first of these new volumes, covers the years 337SH425, from the death of Constantine to the reign of Theodosius II. |
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الصفحة 75
... ancient Parthian capital and traditional prize of Roman emper- ors who invaded Mesopotamia . Speed was of the essence , as it could hardly be expected that Persian leaders would be deceived for long by the Romans ' movements ; but the ...
... ancient Parthian capital and traditional prize of Roman emper- ors who invaded Mesopotamia . Speed was of the essence , as it could hardly be expected that Persian leaders would be deceived for long by the Romans ' movements ; but the ...
الصفحة 651
... ancient culture that have not yet crumbled before the advancing tide . Much of the best recent work on Christianization has implicitly accepted this model : evidence for a Christian ' presence ' in various regions and in various aspects ...
... ancient culture that have not yet crumbled before the advancing tide . Much of the best recent work on Christianization has implicitly accepted this model : evidence for a Christian ' presence ' in various regions and in various aspects ...
الصفحة 712
... ancient Mesopotamian , Jewish and Greek . In the period up to 425 , elements from all three can be readily identified , in varying proportions , in the extant lit- erature ; from the early fifth century onwards , however , the Greek ...
... ancient Mesopotamian , Jewish and Greek . In the period up to 425 , elements from all three can be readily identified , in varying proportions , in the extant lit- erature ; from the early fifth century onwards , however , the Greek ...
المحتوى
The successors of Constantine | 1 |
Constans and the west 34050 | 7 |
Constantius and Persia 33750 | 13 |
حقوق النشر | |
101 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Africa Alamanni Alans Alaric Alexandria Ambrose Ammianus ancient Antioch Arcadius aristocracy army ascetic Athanasius Athaulf Augustine barbarian Basil bishop Blockley C.Th Christian church classical Constans Constantinople Constantius Constantius II Coptic council court culture curial Danube death early fifth east eastern ecclesiastical élite emperor estates Eunapius Eusebius evidence fifth century fourth century frontier Gaul Gothic Goths Gratian Greek Gregory of Nazianzus groups Heather Holy Honorius Huns imperial important Italy John Chrysostom Jones Julian land late antiquity late Roman later Libanius Liebeschuetz literary MacMullen magister Magnentius Marc Matthews Maximus Mesopotamia Milan military Nicene Notitia officials pagan period Persian political polytheism polytheist praetorian prefect provinces region religious rhetoric Rhine Roman empire Rome secular senate senatorial settlement social sources status Stilicho Symmachus Synesius Syriac Tervingi texts Themistius Theodosius Theodosius II tion traditional troops urban usurper Valens Valentinian Visigoths western