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Abuna explained, v. 278, and note.
Abundantius, general of the East, and
patron of the eunuch Eutropius, is dis-
graced and exiled by him, iii. 488.
Abyla, the fair of, plundered by the Sara-
cens, vi. S7, and note.
Abyssinians, converted to Christianity hy
Frumentius, ii. 366. Their early history,
vi. 492, 494, and note. Alliance with Justi-
nian, 495. Their settlement in Yemen
conquered by Nashirvan, v. 138, and note.
History of their church and of their in-
tercourse with the Portuguese, v. 276;
283, and notes. See also Ethiopia.
Acacius, bishop of Amida, an uncommon
instance of episcopal benevolence, iii. 520.
Acacius, father of the empress Theodora,
iv. 293.

Acciainoli, bankers of Florence, obtain the
sovereignty of Athens, vii. 81,

Acephali, of Egypt, the "headless sect," v.
238.

Acesius, the novatian, favoured by Constan-
tine, and invited to the council of Nice,
ii. 388.

Achaia, its extent, i. 29. Principality of,

held by the Villehardouins after the
fourth crusade, vii. 7, 19, notes.
Achilles, a name given to one of the Vandal
generals, iv. 360.

Achilleus, rebellion of, in Egypt, sup-
pressed by Diocletian, i. 435.
Acolyth, the commander of the Varangians,
vi. 202, 278, note.

Acre, the memorable siege of, by the cru-
saders, vi. 502. Final loss of, 522.
Acropolita, the historian, minister of John
Vataces and Theodore Lascaris, vii. 49.
Punished for freely speaking his opinion,
52. His account of Baldwin's flight from
Constantinople, 59, note.

Actions, legal, institutes of Justinian re-
specting, v. 72.

Actium, a review of Roman affairs after the
battle of, i, 79.

Adam, Mahometan opinion respecting, v.
471.

Adam, of Bremen, his account of the Obo-
trites, iii. 364, note. Of the Angli, iv. 226,

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160.

Addison, his description of the road through
the Apennines, iii. 396, note. His opinion
on the correspondence of Christ and
Abgarus v. 363, note. Celebrates Ripaille
and its founder, vii. 240. His Treatise
on Coins referred to, 360, note
Adhed, the last of the Fatimite dynasty in
Egypt, is deposed by Noureddin, and
dies, vi. 492.

Adhemar, bishop of Puy, appointed by
Urban II. to attend the first crusade,
as legate, vi. 404. Associated with Ray-

mond in the command of his division,
422. Distrusts the legend of the Holy
Lauce, 451. Adopts it, 452. His death, of
the plague, before Antioch, 461.
Adiabene. See Assyria.
Administration of the empire, treatise of
Constantine Porphyrogenitus concerning
the, vi. 182.

Admiral, a name of Saracen extraction, vi.
203, and note.

Adolphus, or Athaulphus, the brother-in
-law of Alaric, brings him a reinforce-
ment of troops, iii. 428. Derivation of
the name, 428, note. Is made count of the
domestics to the new emperor Attalus,
434. Succeeds Alaric as king of the
Goths, and concludes a peace with Ho
norius, 453. His marriage with Placidia,
454. Marches into Spain, 468. Is assas-
sinated, 469.

Adoption, how performed in Rome, v. 60,

note. The two kinds of, under the
Greek empire, vi. 433, note. See Arrega.

tion.

Adoration of the Roman emperor, an East-
ern fashion adopted by Diocletian, i, 457.
Description of the ceremony and deriva-
tion of the term, vi. 203, and note.
Adorno, the Genoese governor of Phocæa,
conveys Amurath II. from Asia to Europe,
vii. 196.

Adrian, the emperor, see Hadrian.
Adrian I., pope, his alliance with Charle-
magne against the Lombards, v. 385.
His reception of Charlemagne at Rome,
389. Gives him the mosaics of Ravenna,
392, note; vii. 454. Asserts the fictitious
donation of Constantine the Great, 393.
Accepts the decrees of the second coun-
cil of Nice in favour of image-worship,
398. Threatens to excommunicate the
Greek emperors for not restoring the
estates of the church, 400. The trophies
of his fame, 402.

Adrian IV. puts Arnold of Brescia to death,
vii. 356.

Adrianople. See Hadrianople.

Adulis, a sea port, now Arkiko, iv. 317,

and note.

Adultery, an inexpiable crime among the
early Germans, i. 288, and note. Distinc-
tions of and how punished by Augustus,
v. 85. By the Christian emperors, 87.
Proof of it required by the law of Ma
homet, 514.

desius, the Neo-Platonist, successor of
Iamblichus, directs the studies of Julian,
ii. 511. Fixes his school at Pergamus,
515.

Edui, the, of Gaul. Their state and tax-

ation under Constantine, ii. 240.
Egidius, after the death of Etius, renders
himself independent in Gaul, and is
elected king by the Franks, iv. 70. De-
feats Theodoric II. king of the Visigoths
at Orleans, and checks his progress, 84.

Elia Capitolina, founded on Mount Sion,
by Hadrian, ii. 11.
Elianus. See Lælianus.

Elianus, one of the principal Bagaudæ, 1.428.
Elius Gallus, invades Arabia, i. 2; v. 441,
note; 446, note.

Elius Patus, his Tripartite, the oldest work
of Roman jurisprudence, v. 25.
Emilianus, governor of Pannonia and
Moesia, routs the Goths, and is declared
emperor by his troops, i. 318. Mur-
dered by them, 319.

Emona, now Laybach; the statues of Con-
stantine thrown down there, i. 508.
Stops the career of the rebel Maximus,
iii. 244.

Eneas of Gaza, his attestation of the mira-
culous gift of speech at Tipasa, iv. 148.
Eneas; fables, of his galley preserved in
Rome, iv. 518, note; and of his visit to
the Sibyl's cave, 530, note.

Eneas Sylvius, secretary to the council of
Basil, vii. 225. Founds, when pope, the
university of that city, ib. Applauds the
austere life of the duke of Savoy at Ri-
paille, 240. Describes the repugnance of
Europe to a Turkish war, 339. Strives
to excite one when pope Pius II., Ib.
Eras. See Eras.

derial tribute annually paid to the em-
peror by the prætorian prefect. iv. 323.
Estii, the ancient inhabitants of Esthonia.
Subject to Hermanric, iii. 126. Send
an embassy with offerings of amber to
Theodoric, iv. 259, and note.
Eteriarch, an officer of the Byzantine
court, vi. 202.

Ethiopia, Augustus attempts to conquer,
1.2. The Christian princes of, are urged
by Constantius to exclude Athanasius, ii.
442. Commerce of iv. 317. See also
Abyssinians and Axume.

Etius, surnamed the Atheist, his character
and adventures, ii. 412, 422.
Etius, the Roman general under Valenti-
nian III., his character, iii, 528. His
treacherous scheme to ruin count Boni-
face, 529. Is forced to retire into Pan-
nonia, 540. His invitation of the Huns
into the empire, 549.

Seizes the administration of the
western empire, iv. 2. His character, as
given by Renatus, 3. Employs the Huns
and Alani in the defence of Gaul, 5.
Concludes a peace with Theodoric, 8.
Raises the siege of Orleans, 16. Battle
of Chalons, 21. His prudence on the
invasion of Italy by Attila, 31. Is mur-
dered by Valentinian, 38.
Afrasiabs, heroes of Ferdusi, iii. 150.
Africa, its situation and revolutions, i. 32.
Great revenue raised from, by the Ro-
mans, 204 Revolts in the reign of Dio-
cletian, 435.

Progress of Christianity there, ii. 75.
Is distracted with religious discord in

the time of Constantine the Great, 388.
Character and revolt of the Circumcel-
lions, 453.

Revolt of
Arrival of
531. Per-

Africa, Oppressions of, by count Romanus,
iii. 113. General state of, 116.
ocunt Boniface there, 529.
Genseric, king of the Vandals,
secution of the Donatists, 533. Devasta-
tion of, by the Vandals, 536. Carthage
surprised by Genseric, 542.

Persecution of the Catholics in, ív.
138. Expedition of Belisarius to, 365. Is
recovered by the Romans, 380. The go-
vernment of, settled by Justinian, 381.
Revolt of the troops there, under Stotzas,
499. Devastation of the war, 501.

Invaded by the Saracens, vi. 71.
Conquered by Akbah, 77. Decline and ex-
tinction of Christianity there, 106, Revolt
and independence of the Saracens, 171.
Conquests of Roger, king of Sicily, 344.
Agathias, his praise of the Franks, iv. 181,
and note. The historical books of Proco-
pius continued by him, 290. He thought
the Persian language inharmonious, 467.
Agathyrsi, a painted tribe, subject to the
Alani, iii, 161.

Agaunum, monastery of St. Maurice found-
ed there, ii. 147, iv. 172.
Agents, or official spies, employed by Con-
stantine, ii. 229.

Ager Publicus, public lands of Rome, v. 63,
note.

Agiamoglans, young janizaries serving in
the palace, vii. 201.

Aglabites, the Saracen dynasty of, vi. 171.
Aglue, a Roman lady, patronizes St. Boni
face, ii. 162.

Agnats, their right of inheritance under
the Roman law, v. 66.

Agnes, daughter of the duke of Brunswick,
is married to Andronicus the Younger,
vii. 92, note.

Agrarian law, Jus Agrarium, of Rome. v.
63, and note.

Agricola, his conquests in Britain, and
provisions for their security, i. 4. His
early appointment as military tribune,
16, 17, note. Created a patrician by Ves-
pasian, ii. 204, note.

Agriculture, great improvement of, in the
western countries of the Roman empire,
i. 69. Decay of, in Italy after the time
of Tiberius, iv. 104. State of, in the East-
ern empire, under Justinian, 310.
Agrippa, the faithful friend and adviser of
Augustus, i. 80. Raised to the tribune-
ship, 98, note. The Pantheon at Rome,
dedicated by him to Cybele and Neptune,
vii. 452, note.

Agrippina, mother of Nero, aspired to share
the honours of empire, i. 198.
Ahmed Ebn Arabshah See Arabshah.
Ahriman, the evil principle in Persian theo-
logy, i. 254.

Aidin, a Turkish chieftian, vii. 141.

Ailurus, (the Cat), a name given to Timo-
theus, patriarch of Alexandria, v. 235,
note. See Timothy.

Aix la Chapelle, decorated by Charlemagne,
v. 392, vii. 454.

Aiznadin, battle of, between the Saracens
and the Greeks, vi. 28.
Ajax, the sepulchre of, ii. 182.

Akbah, or Ocba Ben Nafe, invades Africa,
vii. 77, note. Reaches the Atlantic

Ocean, 79, note. His death, 80, note.
Akmim, see Chemmis.

Alani, invade Asia, i. 393. Conquered by
the Huns, iii. 162. Join the Goths who
had emigrated into Thrace, 180. Some
join Radagaisus in his invasion of Italy,
365. Others serve against him in the
army of Stilicho, 367. Occupy Cartha-
gena and Lusitania, 408. Are employed
by Etius to defend Gaul, iv. 5. Some
still encountered in Asia, at the foot of
Mount Caucasus, by the Avars, and by
Zingis, iv. 456.
Their name combined
with that of the Goths in Catalonia, vii.
75, note. See Goths and Vandals.
Alaric, the Goth, learns the art of war
under Theodosius the Great, iii. 265.
Becomes the leader of the Gothic revolt,
and ravages Greece, 335. Escapes from
Stilicho, 342. Is appointed master-gene-
ral of the eastern Illyricum, 344. Is de-
clared king of the Visigoths, 345. His
invasion of Italy, 346. Is defeated by
Stilicho at Pollentia, 352. Again defeated
near Verona and driven out of Italy, 356.
Is, by treaty with Honorius, declared
master-general of Illyricum, 382.
pleas and motives for marching to Rome,
394. Encamps under the walls of that
city, 397. Accepts a ransom, and raises
the siege, 426. His negotiations with the
emperor Honorius, 429. His second
siege of Rome, 432. Places Attalus on
the imperial throne, 434. Degrades him,
437. Seizes the city of Rome, 438. His
sack of Rome, compared with that by
the emperor Charles V. 447. Retires
from Rome, and ravages the South of
Italy, 449. His death and burial, 452.
Alaric II. king of the Goths, his overthrow
by Clovis, king of the Franks, iv. 177.
Alatheus, a warrior of the Ostrogoths,
saves their infant king, iii. 164. Arrives
on the Danube 169. Forces a passage,
171. Retreats, 203. Is defeated and
killed, 204.

His

Alauda, a Roman Legion, raised by Caesar,

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Scanderbeg, vii. 283. A Celtic race, 284,
note; ravage the Morea, 334.
Alberic, the son of Marozia, his revolt, and
government of Rome, v. 422.

Albigeois of France, persecution of, vi. 249.
Albinus, Clodius, Governor of Britain, i.
141. Opposes Didius Julianus, 142. Ne-
gotiates with Severus, 151. Is defeated
and killed in the battle of Lyons, 152.

the pontiff, converted to Christianity,
by his family, iii. 280, note.

the senator, defended by Boethius,
when accused of treason, iv. 280.
Al Bochari, compiled, from the memorials
of Mahomet, the Sonna, or oral law, 5.
475.

Albofleda, wife of Theodoric and sister of
Clovis, iv. 164.

Alboin, king of the Lombards, his treaty
with Justinian, iv. 522. His history,
v. 97. His alliance with the Avars
against the Gepidæ, 99. Reduces the
Gepida, 100. He undertakes the con-
quest of Italy, 101. Overruns what is
now called Lombardy, 104. Assumes
the regal title there, 104. Takes Pavia,
and makes it his capital city, 105. Is
murdered at the instigation of his queen
Rosamond, 107.

Albornoz, archbishop of Toledo and cardinal
Legate in Italy, vii, 416.
Alchemy, the books of, in Egypt, destroyed
by Diocletian, i. 437. A favourite study
in Arabia, vi. 150.

Aldus Manutius, establishes his press at
Venice, vii. 257.

Aleppo, siege and capture of, by the Sara-
cens, vi. 47. Is recovered by the Greeks,
178. Seized by Saladin, 493. Is taken
and sacked by Tamerlane, vii. 175.
Alesia, site of, í. 46, note.
Alexander the Great, embassy of the Ro-
mans to, v. 9, note; said to have been
born in Epirus, vii. 282.
Alexander Severus, the time of his birth,
i. 181, note. Is declared Cæsar by the em
peror Elagabalus, 187. Is raised to the
throne, 189. His intrepidity, 198. Is
murdered, 218. Examination into his
pretended victory over Artaxerxes, 266,
Showed a regard for the Christian reli-
gion, ii. 137.

Alexander uncle and colleague of Constan
tine Porphyrogenitus, v. 322.
Alexander, archbishop of Alexandria, ex-
communicates Arius for his heresy, ii. 404.
Alexander, a Byzantine scribe, why called
Psalliction, iv. 505.

Alexander III. pope, establishes the papal
election in the college of cardinals, vii.
375.

Alexandra, the, of Lycophron predicts the,
greatness of Rome, v. 9, note.
Alexandria, a general massacre there, by
order of the emperor Caracalla, i. 173.
Forts erected there by him, 173. The

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Alexandria, Christian theology reduced to a
systematic form in the school of, ii. 73.
Number of martyrs who suffered there
in the persecution by Decius, 120. The
theological system of Plato taught in the
school of, and received by the Jews
there, 394. Questions concerning the
nature of the Trinity, agitated in the phi-
losophical and Christian schools of, 395.
History of the archbishop St. Athanasius,
424. Outrages attending his expulsion,
and the establishment of his successor,
George of Cappadocia, 440.
The city
distracted by pious factions, 445. Dis-
graceful life and tragical death of George
of Cappadocia, 550. Restoration of Atha-
nasius, 554. Athanasius banished by Ju-
lian, 556.

Suffers greatly by an earthquake, iii.
137. History of the temple of Serapis
there, 285. This temple, and the library,
destroyed by bishop Theophilus, 288.

Is taken by Amrou the Saracen, vi.
61. Attempts of the Greeks to recover
it, 64. The library said to be destroyed
by Amrou, 65. Doubted, 68..
Alexius Angelus, his usurpation of the
Greek empire and character, vi. 534.
Flies before the crusaders, 552.
Alexius 1. Comnenus, emperor of Constan-
tinople, v. 339. New titles of dignity in-
vented by him, vi. 199. Defeated by the
Normans at the Battle of Durazzo, 330.
Solicits the aid of the emperor Henry III.
334. Solicits the aid of the Christian
princes against the Turks, 400. His sus-
picious policy on the arrival of the cru-
saders, 430. Exacts homage from them,
432. Profits by the success of the cru-
saders, 471. His death, v. 341.
Alexius II. Comnenus, emperor of Constan-
tinople, v. 346.

Alexius Strategopulus, the Greek general,
retakes Constantinople from the Latins,
vii. 33.

Alexius, the son of Isaac Angelus, his es-
cape from his uncle, who had deposed his
father, vi. 534. His treaty with the cru-
saders for his restoration, 545. Res-
toration of his father, 557. Death of
Alexius, 562.

Alfred adopted the rigour of the Mosaic
law, iv. 153. Sends an embassy to the
shrine of St. Thomas in India, v. 262.
Algebra, by whom invented, vi. 147.
Algezire, a Spanish town belonging to
Count Julian, vi. 91.

Ali, joins Mahomet in his prophetical mis-
sion, v. 485. His heroism, 499. Marries
Fatima the daughter of Mahomet, 516.
His character, 517. Is chosen caliph of
the Saracens, 520. His assassination, 525.

Devotion paid at his tomb, 525. His
posterity, 527, 529.

Aligern, defends Cumæ for his brother
Teias, king of the Goths, iv. 528. Is
reduced, 530. Serves against the Alle-
manni, 534.

Aliturus, a Jew player in the time of Nero,
ii. 107.

Allectus murders Carausius, and usurps
his station, i. 431. Is defeated and
killed by Asclepiodotus, 432.
Allemanni, the origin and warlike spirit of
i. 235. Gibbon's statement corrected,
325. Are driven out of Italy by the se-
nate and people, 326. Invade the em-
pire in the time of Aurelian, 364. Are
totally routed, 365. Gaul delivered from
their depredations by Constantius Chlo-
rus, 433.

Invade and establish themselves in
Gaul, ii. 323. Are defeated at Strasburg
by Julian, 329. Are reduced by Julian
in his expeditions beyond the Rhine,
333. Invade Gaul in the time of the
emperor Valentinian, iii. 93.
Are re-
duced by Jovinus, 94. And chastised by
Valentinian, 96. Subdued by Clovis king
of the Franks at Tolbiac, iv. 163.
Allobich, count of the domestics, assas-
sination of, iii. 431.

Almamon, caliph, his magnificence, vi. 140.
His love of literature and zeal in collect-
ing the writings of the Greeks, 143.
Almansor, builds Bagdad, vi. 139. Studies
astronomy, 143.

Almo, mount, near Sirmium, cultivated by
the soldiers of Probus, i. 407.
Almogavares. See Amogavares.
Almohades oppress the Zeirides in Africa,
vi. 344.

Almondars, kings of Hira, iv. 469, vi. 9, note,
Almus, an early Hungarian leader, vi. 263,

note.

Alp Arslan, sultan of the Turks, his reign,
vi. 371. Defeats the emperor Romanus,
374. Is assassinated, 379. Inscription
on his tomb, 379.

Alphonso, the Chaste, his Gothic kingdom
in the Asturian mountains, v. 412.
Alps, crossed by Constantine, i. 494.
Altai, mountain in Asia, iv. 451, vii. 133,

note.

Alum, manufactured by the Genoese at
Phocæa. Its subsequent history, vii. 195,
note.

Alypius, formerly governor of Britain, is
commissioned by the emperor Julian to
rebuild the temple of Jerusalem, ii. 536.
Amala, king of the Goths, i. 308. Anti-
quity of the royal race of the Amali, and
origin of the name, iii. 335, 469, note;
iv. 243, note; 395, 420.
Amalafrida, a Gothic princess, married to
Thrasimond the Vandal, and put to
death. iv. 394.

Amalasontha, queen of Italy, erects a monu-

ment at Ravenna to her father Theodo-
ric, iv. 284. Her history and character,
395. Her death, 398, note.
Amalphi, discovery of the Pandests, v. 41,
note. Invention of the mariner's compass,
117, note; vi. 319, note. Its trade and
present state, 320. Passage of pilgrims
to Palestine, 389.
Amalric. See Amaury.

Amandus, a leader of the Bagaudæ, i. 428.
Amantius, the eunuch, rules the palace of
Anastasius, iv. 286, put to death, 287.
Amaury, or Amalric, king of Jerusalem, vi.

496.

Amazons, improbability of any society of,
i. 380, note.

Ambassadors, treatment of the Persian by
Justinian, iv. 491. General reception of,
in the Byzantine court, vi. 204.
Amber, a Roman luxury, i, 72. Presented
to Theoderic by the ambassadors of the
Estii, iv. 259, note.

Ambition, reflections on the violence and
various operations of that passion, v.357.
vi. 142, note.

Ambrose, St., justifies the use of the sword
asaint heresy, ii. 409. Composed a trea-
tise on the Trinity, for the use of the Em-
peror Gratian, iii. 212, note. His birth and
promotion to the archbishopric of Milan
236. Opposes the Arian worship of the
empress Justina, 237. Refuses obedience
to the imperial power, 239. Controls the
emperor Theodosius, 256. Imposes pe-
nance on Theodosius for his cruel treat-
ment of Thessalonica, 258. Employed
his influence over Gratian and Theo-
dosius, to inspire them with maxims of
persecution, 272. Opposes Symmachus,
the advocate for the old Pagan religion,
278. Comforts the citizens of Florence
with a dream, when besieged by Rada-
gaisus, 368.

Ambrosius Aurelian defends Britain against
the Saxons, iv. 221.

Amelius, Neo-Platonist philosopher, i. 466.
Amelot de la Houssaie, historian of Venice,
iv. 31, note.

Amida, siege of, by Sapor king of Persia, ii.
317. Receives the fugitive inhabitants
of Nisibis, iii. 54. Is besieged and taken
by Cabades king of Persia, iv. 346.
Amina, the mother of Mahomet, v. 464.
Amir, the Turkish prince, friend of Canta-
cuzene, vii. 143.

Ammatus, brother of Gelimer, iv. 373.
Ammianus Marcellinus, the historian, his
sincerity, ii. 296. One of the defenders
of Amida, 318. His religious character
of the emperor Constantius, 421. His
remark on the enmity of Christians
towards each other, 456. His account of
the fiery obstructions to restoring the
temple of Jerusalem, 537. Of the contest
of Damasus and Ursinus for the bishopric
of Rome, iii. 90. Testimony in favour of

his historical merit, 196. His character
of the nobles of Rome, 406.
Ammonius Saccas, the Neo-Platonist, i. 466.
Ammonius, the mathematician, his mea
surement of the circuit of Rome, iii.
421.

Ammonius, the monk of Alexandria, his
martyrdom, v. 212.

Amogavares, or Almogavares, their origin,
vii. 75, note.

Amorian dynasty, v. 310.

Amorium, siege and destruction of, by the
caliph Motassem, vi. 164.
Amphilochius, bishop of Iconium, gains the
favour of the emperor Theodosius by an
orthodox bon mot, iii. 221, and note.
Amphitheatre of Titus, i. 59. Description
of the, 416; vii. 460.

Ampoulle, La Sainte, the fable of, iv. 166,
Amrou, his conversion, v. 501. Supports
Moawiyah, 526. His birth and charac-
ter, vi. 54. His invasion and conquest of
Egypt, 56. Is said to have destroyed
the library of Alexandria, 64. His ad-
ministration there, 67. His description
of the country, 69.

Amrou, the last of the Soffarides, vi. 172.
Amurath I. sultan of the Turks, his reign,
vii. 147. His death, 149.
Amurath II. sultan, his reign and cha-
racter, vii. 266. His two abdications,
267, 268. Promotes Scanderbeg, 279. Is
defeated by him, 281. Dies, 282.
Amycus, tradition respecting his reign on
the shore of the Bosphorus, i. 177.
Ana, Annah or Anatho, a city on the Eu
phrates, taken by Julian, iii. 18, note,
Anachorets, in monkish history described,
iv. 118, 124, 129.

Anacletus, pope, gives the title of king to
Roger count of Sicily, vi. 342. His Jew.
ish extraction, vii. 385.

Anagni, a city of Italy, where pope Boniface
VIII. was assaulted, vii. 378. Cursed by
Benedict XI., 379.

Anastasia, sister of Constantine the Great;
her two marriages, i. 508; ii. 249.
Anastasia, empress of Tiberius II. v. 111.
Anastasia Gregory of Nazianzen's private

church at Constantinople, iii. 224.
Anastasius I. marries the empress Ariadne,
iv. 247. His war with Theodoric, the
Ostrogoth, king of Italy, 262, His eco-
nomy celebrated, 320. His long wall
from the Propontis to the Euxine, 340.
War with Persia, 346. Is humbled by
the Catholic clergy, v. 237, 239.
Anastasins II. emperor of Constantinople,
v. 299. His preparations of defence
against the Saracens, vi. 119.
Anastasius, St. his martyrdom, v. 173, note.
Anatho. See Ana.

Anatolia, conquest of, by the Moguls, vii.

128.

Anatolius, an officer in Julian's army, iii
40, 42.

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