The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman ConquestUniversity of Michigan Press, 1987 - 683 pages |
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Page 127
... western Greece freedom to elect its own bishops , as it had been doing since 1213 . Germanos II , patriarch in Nicea , however , would have none of this . His reply blamed past difficulties entirely on Epirus . Problems in communication ...
... western Greece freedom to elect its own bishops , as it had been doing since 1213 . Germanos II , patriarch in Nicea , however , would have none of this . His reply blamed past difficulties entirely on Epirus . Problems in communication ...
Page 179
... western Bulgarian lands , weakening Trnovo by the same amount that the Hungarians gained , and established a separate “ Bulgarian ” state under a puppet tsar who had to lean on the Hungarians to maintain his independence in internal mat ...
... western Bulgarian lands , weakening Trnovo by the same amount that the Hungarians gained , and established a separate “ Bulgarian ” state under a puppet tsar who had to lean on the Hungarians to maintain his independence in internal mat ...
Page 258
... Western allies from supporting Milutin's Serbian rival , as they otherwise might have done , should their forces land in the Balkans ; this was a clear and present danger to Milutin , for Dragutin had close ties with the papacy and was ...
... Western allies from supporting Milutin's Serbian rival , as they otherwise might have done , should their forces land in the Balkans ; this was a clear and present danger to Milutin , for Dragutin had close ties with the papacy and was ...
Contents
The Balkans in the Late Twelfth Century | 1 |
Raška and Zeta 120607 to ca 1216 | 49 |
Notes | 56 |
Copyright | |
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able accepted acquired action active agreed Albanian alliance allies allowed Anatolia army attack authority battle Bayezid became become believe bishop Bosnia brother Bulgaria Byzantine Byzantium called campaign Cantacuzenus Catholic cause century Charles Church claims coast concluded considerable Constantine Constantinople continued court crusaders daughter death died Dubrovnik Dušan early emperor empire Epirus established existing fact followed forces fortresses further George granted Greek held holding Hungarian Hungary independence Italy John king lands late Latin major marched married Michael military monastery nobles noted Ottoman patriarch peace pope position possession presumably prince probably raids received recognized region relations remained result returned River rule ruler scholars seems sent Serbia Serbs Sigismund soon sources Stefan success suzerainty taken territory Theodore Thessaloniki Thessaly took town treaty troops Turkish Turks turned Tvrtko various vassal Venetian Venice western Zeta