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Examples
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Zenobia said that she was trying to protect the Eastern Roman Empire for the peace of Rome, however, her efforts significantly increased the power of her throne.
Archive 2009-09-01 Elizabeth Kerri Mahon 2009
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Zenobia said that she was trying to protect the Eastern Roman Empire for the peace of Rome, however, her efforts significantly increased the power of her throne.
Zenobia, Queen of Palmyra Elizabeth Kerri Mahon 2009
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The Koran was written during occupation of parts of the Eastern Roman Empire.
Think Progress » Anti-Muslim Congressman Has ‘No Intention Of Apologizing’ 2006
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In 1204, Constantinople, capital of the Eastern Roman Empire for nearly nine hundred years, fell to a band of soldiers bound for Jerusalem on the Fourth Crusade.
Eastern Glory Rowland, Ingrid D. 2004
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Franks, the Kingdom of the Turks, that of the Soldan [of Egypt], and today the people of Germany, and before then that Saracen Sect which accomplished such great things and occupied so much of the world after having destroyed the Eastern Roman Empire.
Discourses 2003
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EASTERN ORTHODOX CHRISTIANITY developed in the older cities in the eastern Mediterranean and had its center in Constantinople, proclaimed the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire in 330 C.E. The Eastern Church did not accept the primacy of the Bishop of Rome and developed doctrinally distinctive positions.
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In 524, he was beheaded for having “treasonable contacts” with the Eastern Roman Empire.
Euclid’s Window Leonard Mlodinow 2001
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To the Eastern Roman Empire, with Constantinople as its capital, and with the Greeks as its dominant population, and to the medieval kingdoms of the Bulgars and Serbs, had succeeded by the year 1500 the empire of the Ottoman Turks.
A Political and Social History of Modern Europe V.1. Carlton J. H. Hayes 1923
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If Byzantine literature is the expression of the intellectual life of the Greek race of the Eastern Roman Empire during the
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux 1840-1916 1913
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They base this opinion upon certain differences between the art remains of the first period of the Eastern Roman Empire and those of the Western Roman Empire, which differences they maintain are essential.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux 1840-1916 1913
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