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Byzantine$10462$ - traducción al holandés

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Byzantine church; Byzantine Christian; Byzantine Christianity; Byzantine Church (disambiguation); Byzantine Churches; Byzantine churches; Byzantine Christians

Byzantine      
n. Byzantisch, inwoner van Byzantium
Greek Catholic         
GROUP OF EASTERN CATHOLIC CHURCHES FOLLOWING THE BYZANTINE (GREEK) LITURGY
Greek Catholic; Greek catholic; Greek-Catholicism; Greek-catholic; Byzantine Catholic; Greek Catholicism; Greek-Catholic; Greek Catholics; Greco-Catholic; Byzantine Rite Catholic; Greek-Catholic Church; Byzantine Catholic Church; Byzantine Catholics; Byzantine Catholic Christian; Christian - Byzantine Catholic; Greek Byzantine Catholicism; Uniate Greeks; Greek Catholic Churches; Greek Catholic churches; Greek catholic churches; Greek Catholic church; Greek catholic church; Greek-Catholic church; Greek-catholic church; Greek-Catholic Churches; Greek-Catholic churches; Greek-catholic churches; Greek catholicism; Greek-catholicism; Greek catholics; Greek-Catholics; Greek-catholics; Byzantine Catholic Churches; Greco-Catholicism; Greco-Catholic Church; Greco-Catholic Churches; Byzantine-rite Catholic Churches; Byzantine Rite Catholic Churches; Byzantine Rite Catholic Church; Byzantine-rite Catholic Church
Grieks Katholiek
Byzantine Empire         
  • 1263}}
  • Byzantium]] in the late Angeloi period
  • Komnenos dynasty]]
  • refugee Byzantine scholars]] fled to North Italy in the 1400s, like [[John Argyropoulos]] (1415–1487).
  • Dawkins, R.M.]] 1916. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.</ref>)
  • Triumphal arch mosaics of [[Jesus Christ]] and the Apostles. In [[Basilica of San Vitale]] in [[Ravenna]], Italy.
  • 1025}})
  • [[Constantinople]] was the largest and wealthiest city in Europe throughout late antiquity and most of the Middle Ages until the [[Fourth Crusade]] in 1204.
  • Leo III]], c.&nbsp;717. Striped indicates areas raided by the Umayyads.
  • 867}}
  • bowed lyra]], from a Byzantine ivory casket (900–1100) (''Museo Nazionale, Florence'')
  • The double-headed eagle]], a common Imperial symbol
  • 600}} during the reign of Maurice. Half of the Italian peninsula and most of southern Hispania were lost, but the eastern borders expanded, gaining land from the Persians.
  • Flag of the late Empire]] under the Palaiologoi, sporting the [[tetragrammic cross]] symbol of the [[Palaiologos dynasty]]
  • By 650 (pictured) the empire had lost all its southern provinces, except the [[Exarchate of Africa]], to the Rashidun Caliphate. At the same time the Slavs invaded and settled in the Balkans.
  • The Byzantine Empire and the Seljuk [[Sultanate of Rûm]] before the [[First Crusade]] (1095–1099)
  • Christ Pantocrator mosaic in [[Hagia Sophia]], circa 1261
  • Mary]] and [[Jesus]], flanked by [[John II Komnenos]] (left) and his wife [[Irene of Hungary]] (right), 12th century
  • Mural of [[Saints Cyril and Methodius]], 19th century, [[Troyan Monastery]], Bulgaria
  • Kingdoms of the [[Diadochi]] c.{{nbsp}}301{{nbsp}}BC, after the [[Battle of Ipsus]]
  • The Eastern Mediterranean just before the [[Fall of Constantinople]]
  • The Entry of the Crusaders into Constantinople]]'', by [[Eugène Delacroix]] (1840)
  • Golden Solidus of [[Justinian I]] (527–565) excavated in India probably in the south, an example of [[Indo-Roman trade]] during the period
  • Byzantine–Arab Wars]] (from the [[Madrid Skylitzes]], [[Biblioteca Nacional de España]], Madrid).
  • Justinian]] built the Church of the Holy Wisdom of God, [[Hagia Sophia]], which was completed in the short period of four and a half years (532–537).
  • Iconoclast]] art in the [[Hagia Irene]] Church in Istanbul.
  • Theophilos]] and the Abbasid caliph [[Al-Ma'mun]]
  • 1204}}
  • Andrassos]] in 960, from the ''[[Madrid Skylitzes]]''
  • National Historical Museum]], Athens, Greece
  • The extent of the Empire under [[Basil II]]
  • Komnenian]] art
  • Theodora]] and attendants (Mosaic from [[Basilica of San Vitale]], 6th century)
  • 10th century military successes were coupled with a major cultural revival, the so-called [[Macedonian Renaissance]]. Miniature from the [[Paris Psalter]], an example of Hellenistic-influenced art.
  • 1452}}
  • The Eastern Roman/Byzantine Empire}}
  • Rome from the creation of the republic to the rule of the first emperor Augustus
  • [[Constantine the Great]] was the first Roman emperor to convert to Christianity and moved the seat of the empire to [[Byzantium]], renamed [[Constantinople]] in his honour.
  • John VIII]] during his visit in [[Ferrara]] and [[Florence]] in 1438
  • Skylitzis Chronicle]]
  • Leo III]] (left), and his son and heir, [[Constantine V]] (right)
  • pp=202–205}}.</ref>
  • Map of the Roman Empire under the Tetrarchy, showing the dioceses and the four tetrarchs' zones of influence.
  • Komnenian period]]
  • [[Constantine IV]] and his retinue, mosaic in [[Basilica of Sant'Apollinare in Classe]]. Constantine IV defeated the [[First Arab siege of Constantinople]].
  • The seizure of [[Edessa]] (1031) by the Byzantines under [[George Maniakes]] and the counterattack by the [[Seljuk Turks]]
  • Theodora]] with her retinue. Mosaic of the [[Basilica of San Vitale]] in [[Ravenna]], VI century
  • House of Representatives]] in the [[United States Capitol]]
  • Restored section of the [[Walls of Constantinople]]
  • Rus']] under the walls of Constantinople (860)
ROMAN EMPIRE DURING LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE MIDDLE AGES
Eastern Roman Empire; Byzantine empire; East Roman; Byzantian Empire; East Roman Empire; Eastern Roman; Eastern Empire; Eastern Roman empire; Rhomania; Lower Empire; Byzantine Empire, The; Byzantine simplified chronology; Romeians; Byzatine empire; Byzantine; Romaion; Rhomaion; Eastern Roman Empires; East rome; East Rome; Eastern Rome; Bizance; Byzantine Expire; Empire of the Greeks; Imperium Graecum; Byzantian; East romen empire; Empire of Constantinople; Vizanteus; Bisantium; Bysantium; Bysanthium; Vizantija; Basileia tou Romaion; Byzantine culture; Legacy of Byzantium; Byzantine Greek Empire; Byzantine Empire/temp; Byzantine (Eastern Roman) Empire; The Byzantine Empire; Byzantine lands; Basileía Rhōmaíōn; Byzantine civilization; Byzantine period; Culture of the Byzantine Empire; Byzantine Empire under the Kantakouzenos dynasty; Byzantine Empire under the Lekapenos family; Grikland; Byzantine world; (Eastern) Roman Empire; Eastern empire; Romaean; Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire; Byzantine epoch; Empire of Byzantium; Empire of Eastern Rome; Economy of the Byzantine Empire
Byzantijns Keizerrijk

Definición

Byzantian
·adj & ·noun ·see Byzantine.

Wikipedia

Byzantine Church

Byzantine Church or Byzantine church may refer to:

  • Historically, the State church of the Roman Empire
    • particularly, Eastern Orthodox Church in the Byzantine Empire
  • Any church that uses the Byzantine Rite a.k.a. Greek rite
    • the Eastern Orthodox Church
    • the 14 different Greek Catholic Churches, Eastern Catholic Churches that are using the Byzantine Rite
  • Church buildings belonging to Byzantine architecture, usually built during the Byzantine Empire
    • Post-Byzantine church buildings, built during the Post-Byzantine era (16th-18th c.)
    • Modern church buildings belonging to the Byzantine Revival architecture also known as Neo-Byzantine architectural style
  • Byzantine Church (Petra)