1241 Battles of
Liegnitz
and Mohi.
Cambridge Medieval History - v4 - Eastern Roman Empire
The Fātimid Caliphs annex Egypt.
(10 Dec. ) Murder of Nicephorus Phocas and accession of John Tzimisces.
970 Capture of Aleppo.
Accession of Géza as Prince of the Magyars.
971 Revolt of Bardas Phocas.
The Emperor John Tzimisces annexes Eastern Bulgaria.
972 Death of Svyatoslav of Kiev.
976 (10 Jan. ) Death of John Tzimisces: personal rule of Basil II Bulgar-
octonus begins.
Peter Orseolo I elected Doge.
976–979 Revolt of Bardas Sclerus.
980 Accession of Vladímir in Russia.
985 Fall of the eunuch Basil.
986–1018 Great Bulgarian War.
987–989 Conspiracy of Phocas and Sclerus.
988 The Fātimid Caliphs occupy Syria.
989 Baptism of Vladímir of Russia.
Vladimir captures Cherson.
991 The Fāțimids re-occupy Syria.
991–1009 Reign of Peter Orseolo II as Doge.
992 (19 July) First Venetian treaty with the Eastern Empire.
994 Saif-ad-Daulah takes Aleppo and establishes himself in Northern Syria.
994–1001 War with the Fățimids.
995 Basil Il's campaign in Syria.
996 (Jan. ) Novel against the Powerful.
Defeat of the Bulgarians on the Spercheus.
997 Accession of St Stephen in Hungary, and conversion of the Magyars.
998-1030 Reign of Maḥmūd of Ghaznah.
1006 Vladímir of Russia makes a treaty with the Bulgarians.
1009 The Patriarch Sergius erases the Pope's name from the diptychs.
1014 Battle of Cimbalongu; death of the Tsar Samuel.
1015 Death of Vladímir of Russia.
1018-1186 Bulgaria a Byzantine province.
1021-1022 Annexation of Vaspurakan to the Empire.
1024 The Patriarch Eustathius attempts to obtain from the Pope the autonomy
of the Greek Church.
1025 (15 Dec. ) Death of Basil II and accession of Constantine VIII.
1026 Fall of the Orseoli at Venice.
1028 (11 Nov. ) Death of Constantine VIII and succession of Zoë and
Romanus III Argyrus.
1030 Defeat of the Greeks near Aleppo.
1031 Capture of Edessa by George Maniaces.
1034 (12 April) Murder of Romanus III and accession of Michael IV the
Paphlagonian.
Government of John the Orphanotrophos.
1038 Death of St Stephen of Hungary.
Success of George Maniaces in Sicily.
The Seljūq Țughril Beg proclaimed.
1041 (10 Dec. ) Death of Michael IV and succession of Michael V Calaphates.
Banishment of John the Orphanotrophos.
1042 (21 April) Revolution in Constantinople; fall of Michael V.
Zoë and Theodora joint Empresses.
(11–12 June) Zoë's marriage; accession of her husband, Constantine IX
Monomachus.
1043 Michael Cerularius becomes Patriarch.
Rising of George Maniaces; his defeat and death at Ostrovo.
1045 Foundation of the Law School of Constantinople.
1046 Annexation of Armenia (Ani) to the Empire.
1047 Revolt of Tornicius.
1
## p. 903 (#945) ############################################
Chronological Table
903
1048 Appearance of the Seljūqs on the eastern frontier of the Empire.
1050 Death of the Empress Zoë.
1054 (20 July) The Patriarch Michael Cerularius breaks with Rome; schism
between the Eastern and Western Churches.
1055 (11 Jan. ) Death of Constantine IX; Theodora sole Empress.
The Seljūq Țughril Beg enters Baghdad.
1056 (31 Aug. ) Death of Theodora and proclamation of Michael VI Stratio-
ticus.
1057 Revolt of Isaac Comnenus. Deposition of Michael Vi.
(1 Sept. ? ) Isaac I Comnenus crowned Emperor at Constantinople.
1058 Deposition and death of Michael Cerularius.
1059 Treaty of Melfi.
Abdication of Isaac Comnenus.
1059–1067 Reign of Constantine X Ducas.
1063 Death of Țughril Beg;
1063-1072 Reign of the Seljūq Alp Arslān.
1064 Capture of Ani by the Seljūqs, and conquest of Greater Armenia.
1066 Foundation of the Nizamīyah University at Baghdad.
1067-1071 Reign of Romanus III Diogenes.
1071 Capture of Bari by the Normans and loss of Italy.
Battle of Manzikert.
The Seljūqs occupy Jerusalem.
1071-1078 Reign of Michael VII Parapinaces Ducas.
1072–1092 Reign of the Seljūq Malik Shāh.
1077 Accession of Sulaiman I, Sultan of Rūm.
1078 The Turks at Nicaea.
1078_1081 Reign of Nicephorus III Botaniates.
1080 Alliance between Robert Guiscard and Pope Gregory VII.
Foundation of the Armeno-Cilician kingdom.
1081–1118 Reign of Alexius I Comnenus.
1081-1084 Robert Guiscard's invasion of Epirus.
1082 Treaty with Venice.
1086 Incursions of the Patzinaks begin.
1091 (29 April) Defeat of the Patzinaks at the river Leburnium.
1094-1095 Invasion of the Cumans.
1094 Council of Piacenza.
1095 (18-28 Nov. ) Council of Clermont proclaims the First Crusade.
1096 The Crusaders at Constantinople.
1097 The Crusaders capture Nicaea.
1098 Council of Bari. St Anselm refutes the Greeks.
1099 Establishment of the Kingdom of Jerusalem.
1100 (18 July) Death of Godfrey of Bouillon.
1104 Defeat of the Crusaders at Harrãn.
1107 Bohemond's expedition against Constantinople.
1108 Battle of Durazzo.
Treaty with Bohemond.
1116 Battle of Philomelium.
1118-1143 Reign of John II Comnenus.
1119 First expedition of John Comnenus to Asia Minor.
1122 Defeat of the Patzinaks near Eski-Sagra.
1122–1126 War with Venice.
1128 The Emperor John Comnenus defeats the Hungarians near Haram.
1137 (May) Roger II of Sicily's fleet defeated off Trani.
1137–1138 Campaign of John Comnenus in Cilicia and Syria.
1143-1180 Reign of Manuel I Comnenus.
1147-1149 The Second Crusade.
1147–1149 War with Roger II of Sicily.
1151 The Byzantines at Ancona.
1152–1154 Hungarian War.
1154 Death of Roger II of Sicily.
## p. 904 (#946) ############################################
904
Chronological Table
1158 Campaign of Manuel Comnenus in Syria.
1159 His solemn entry into Antioch; zenith of his power.
1163 Expulsion of the Greeks from Cilicia.
1164 Battle of Hārim.
1168 Annexation of Dalmatia.
1170 The Emperor Manuel attempts to re-unite the Greek and Armenian
Churches.
1171 Rupture of Manuel with Venice.
1173 Frederick Barbarossa besieges Ancona.
1176 Battle of Myriocephalum.
Battle of Legnano.
1177 Peace of Venice.
1180_1183 Reign of Alexius II Comnenus.
1180 Foundation of the Serbian monarchy by Stephen Nemanja.
1182 Massacre of Latins in Constantinople.
1183 (Sept. ) Andronicus I Comnenus becomes joint Emperor.
(Nov. ) Murder of Alexius II.
1185 The Normans take Thessalonica.
Deposition and death of Andronicus; accession of Isaac II Angelus.
1185–1219 Reign of Leo II the Great of Cilicia.
1186 Second Bulgarian Empire founded.
1187 Saladin captures Jerusalem.
1189 Sack of Thessalonica.
1189-1192 Third Crusade.
1190 Death of Frederick Barbarossa in the East.
Isaac Angelus defeated by the Bulgarians.
1191 Occupation of Cyprus by Richard Coeur-de-Lion.
1192 Guy de Lusignan purchases Cyprus from Richard I.
1193-1205 Reign of the Doge Enrico Dandolo.
1195 Deposition of Isaac II; accession of Alexius III Angelus.
1197–1207 The Bulgarian Tsar Johannitsa (Kalojan).
1201 (April) Fourth Crusade. The Crusaders' treaty with Venice.
(May) Boniface of Montferrat elected leader of the Crusade.
1203 (17 July) The Crusaders enter Constantinople.
Deposition of Alexius III; restoration of Isaac II with Alexius IV
Angelus.
1203_1227 Empire of Jenghiz Khan.
1204 (8 Feb. ) Deposition of Isaac II and Alexius IV; accession of Alexius V
Ducas (Mourtzouphlos).
(13 April) · Sack of Constantinople.
(16 May) Coronation of Baldwin, Count of Flanders, and foundation of
the Latin Empire of Constantinople.
The compulsory union of the Eastern and Western Churches.
The Venetians purchase the island of Crete.
Alexius Comnenus founds the state of Trebizond.
1205 (14 April) The Bulgarians defeat the Emperor Baldwin I at Hadrianople.
1206 (21 Aug. ) Henry of Flanders crowned Latin Emperor of Constantinople.
Theodore I Lascaris crowned Emperor of Nicaea.
1208 Peace with the Bulgarians.
1210 The Turks of Rūm defeated on the Maeander by Theodore Lascaris.
1212 Peace with Nicaea.
1215 The Fourth Lateran Council.
1216 Death of the Emperor Henry, and succession of Peter of Courtenay.
1217 Stephen crowned King of Serbia.
1218 Death of Geoffrey of Villehardouin, Prince of Achaia.
1219 Creation of a separate Serbian Church.
1221-1228 Reign of Robert of Courtenay, Latin Emperor of Constantinople.
1222 Recovery of Thessalonica by the Greeks of Epirus.
Death of Theodore Lascaris, Emperor of Nicaea. Accession of John III
Vatatzes.
## p. 905 (#947) ############################################
Chronological Table
905
1222 First appearance of the Mongols in Europe.
1224 The Emperor of Nicaea occupies Hadrianople.
1228 Death of Stephen, the first King of Serbia.
228-1237 Reign of John of Brienne, Latin Emperor of Constantinople.
1230 Destruction of the Greek Empire of Thessalonica by the Bulgarians.
1234 Fall of the Kin Dynasty in China.
1235 Revival of the Bulgarian Patriarchate.
1236 Constantinople attacked by the Greeks and Bulgarians.
1236 (? ) Alliance between the Armenians and the Mongols.
1237 Invasion of Europe by the Mongols.
1237-1261 Reign of Baldwin II, last Latin Emperor of Constantinople.
1241 Battles of Liegnitz and Mohi.
Death of John Asên II; the decline of Bulgaria begins.
1244 The Despotat of Thessalonica becomes a vassal of Nicaea.
1245 Council of Lyons.
1246 Reconquest of Macedonia from the Bulgarians.
1254 (30 Oct. ) Death of John Vatatzes; Theodore II Lascaris succeeds as
Emperor of Nicaea.
Submission of the Despot of Epirus to Nicaea.
Mamlūk Sultans in Egypt.
1255–1256 Theodore II's Bulgarian campaigns.
1256 Overthrow of the Assassins by the Mongols.
1258 Death of Theodore II Lascaris. Accession of John IV Lascaris.
Destruction of Baghdad by the Mongols and overthrow of the Caliphate.
1259 (1 Jan. ) Michael VIII Palaeologus proclaimed Emperor of Nicaea.
1259-1294 Reign of Kublai Khan.
1260 The Egyptians defeat the Mongols at 'Ain Jālūt.
1261 (25 July) Capture of Constantinople by the Greeks; end of the Latin
Empire.
1261–1530° Abbasid Caliphate in Cairo.
1266 (Feb. ) Charles of Anjou's victory over Manfred at Benevento.
1267 (27 May) Treaty of Viterbo.
1267-1272 Progress of Charles of Anjou in Epirus.
1270 (25 Aug. ) Death of St Louis.
1274 Ecumenical Council at Lyons; union of the Churches again achieved.
1276 Leo III of Cilicia defeats the Mamlūks.
1278 Leo III of Cilicia defeats the Seljūqs of Iconium.
1281 Joint Mongol and Armenian forces defeated by the Mamlūks on the
Orontes.
(18 Nov. ) Excommunication of Michael Palaeologus; breach of the
Union.
Victory of the Berat over the Angevins.
1282 (30 May) The Sicilian Vespers.
(11
Dec. ) Death of Michael Palaeologus. Accession of Andronicus II.
c. 1290 Foundation of Wallachia.
1291 Fall of Acre.
1299 Osmān, Emir of the Ottoman Turks.
1302 Osmān's victory at Baphaeum.
End of the alliance between the Armenians and the Mongols.
1302–1311 The Catalan Grand Company in the East.
1308 Turks enter Europe.
Capture of Ephesus by the Turks.
1309 Capture of Rhodes from the Turks by the Knights of St John.
1311 Battle of the Cephisus.
1326 Brūsa surrenders to the Ottoman Turks.
(Nov. ) Death of Osman.
1326-1359 Reign of Orkhān.
1328_1341 Reign of Andronicus III Palaeologus.
1329 The Ottomans capture Nicaea.
1330 (28 June) Defeat of the Bulgarians by the Serbians at the battle of
Velbužd.
## p. 906 (#948) ############################################
906
Chronological Table
1331 (8 Sept. ) Coronation of Stephen Dušan as King of Serbia.
1336 Birth of Timur.
1337 The Ottomans capture Nicomedia.
Conquest of Cilicia by the Mamlūks.
1341 Succession of John V Palaeologus. Rebellion of John Cantacuzene.
1342-1344 Guy of Lusignan King of Cilicia.
1342–1349 Revolution of the Zealots at Thessalonica.
1344-1363 Reign of Constantine IV in Cilicia.
1345 Stephen Dušan conquers Macedonia.
1346 Stephen Dušan crowned Emperor of the Serbs and Greeks.
1347 John VI Cantacuzene takes Constantinople.
1348 Foundation of the Despotat of Mistra.
1349 Independence of Moldavia.
1350 Serbo-Greek treaty.
1354 The Turks take Gallipoli.
1355 Abdication of John VI Cantacuzene. Restoration of John V.
(20 Dec. ) Death of Stephen Dušan.
1356 The Turks begin to settle in Europe.
1357 The Turks capture Hadrianople.
1359–1389 Reign of Murād I.
1360 Formation of the Janissaries from tribute-children.
1363–1373 Reign of Constantine V in Cilicia.
1365 The Turks establish their capital at Hadrianople.
1368 Foundation of the Ming dynasty in China.
1369 (21 Oct. ) John V abjures the schism.
1371 (26 Sept. ) Battle of the Maritza.
Death of Stephen Uroš V.
1373 The Emperor John V becomes the vassal of the Sultan Murād.
1373-1393 Leo VI of Lusignan, the last King of Armenia.
1375 Capture and exile of Leo VI of Armenia.
1376-1379 Rebellion of Andronicus IV.
Coronation of Tvrtko as King of the Serbs and Bosnia.
1379 Restoration of John V.
1382 Death of Louis the Great of Hungary.
1387 Turkish defeat ou the Toplica.
Surrender of Thessalonica to the Turks.
1389 (15 June) Battle of Kossovo; fall of the Serbian Empire.
1389-1403 Reign of Bāyazīd.
1390 Usurpation of John VII Palaeologus.
1391 Death of John V. Accession of Manuel II Palaeologus.
(23 Mar. ) Death of Tvrtko I.
Capture of Philadelphia by the Turks.
1393 Turkish conquest of Thessaly.
(17 July) Capture of Trnovo; end of the Bulgarian Empire.
1394 (10 Oct. ) Turkish victory at Rovine in Wallachia.
1396 25 Sept. ) Battle of Nicopolis.
1397 Bāyazid attacks Constantinople.
1398 The Turks invade Bosnia.
Tīmūr invades India and sacks Delhi.
1401 Tīmūr sacks Baghdad.
1402 (28 July) Tīmūr defeats the Ottoman Sultan Bāyazīd at Angora.
1402–1413 Civil war among the Ottoman Turks.
1403 (21 Nov. ) Second battle of Kossovo.
1405 Death of Tīmūr.
1409 Council of Pisa.
1413-1421 Reign of Mahomet I.
1413 (10 July) Turkish victory at Chamorlū.
1416 The Turks declare war on Venice.
(29 May) Turkish fleet defeated off Gallipoli.
1418 Death of Mirčea the Great of Wallachia.
## p. 907 (#949) ############################################
Chronological Table
907
1421-1451 Reign of Murād II.
1422 Siege of Constantinople by the Turks.
1423 Turkish expedition into the Morea.
Thessalonica purchased by Venice.
1423-1448 Reign of John VIII Palaeologus.
1426 Battle of Choirokoitia.
1430 Capture of Thessalonica by the Turks.
1431 Council of Basle opens.
1432 Death of the last Frankish Prince of Achaia.
1438 (9 April) Opening of the Council of Ferrara.
1439 (10 Jan. ) The Council of Ferrara removed to Florence.
(6 July) The Union of Florence.
Completion of the Turkish conquest of Serbia.
1440 The Turks besiege Belgrade.
1441 John Hunyadi appointed vojvode of Transylvania.
1443-146 Skanderbeg's war of independence against the Turks.
1444 (July) Peace of Szegedin.
(10 Nov. ) Battle of Varna.
1446 Turkish invasion of the Morea.
1448 (17 Oct. ) Third battle of Kossovo. Accession of Constantine XI Palaeo-
logus.
1451 Accession of Mahomet II.
1453 (29 May) Capture of Constantinople by the Turks.
1456 The Turks again besiege Belgrade.
1457 Stephen the Great succeeds in Moldavia.
1458 The Turks capture Athens.
1459 Final end of medieval Serbia.
1461 Turkish conquest of Trebizond.
1462–1479 War between Venice and the Turks.
1463 Turkish conquest of Bosnia.
1468 Turkish conquest of Albania.
1475 Stephen the Great of Moldavia defeats the Turks at Racova.
1479 Venice cedes Scutari to the Turks.
1484 The Montenegrin capital transferred to Cetinje.
1489 Venice acquires Cyprus.
1499 Renewal of Turco-Venetian War.
1517 Conquest of Egypt by the Turks.
1523 Conquest of Rhodes by the Turks.
1537-1540 Third Turco-Venetian War.
1571 Conquest of Cyprus from Venice by the Turks.
## p. 908 (#950) ############################################
1
## p. 909 (#951) ############################################
909
INDEX
136 sq.
122 sg.
Aaron, son of Shishman, Bulgarian chief, Abū’l-Aghlab, Saracen governor of Sicily,
239; executed, 240, 242
Aaron the Bulgarian, general of Michael VI, Abū’l-'Alà al-Ma'arri, blind Arab poet,
321
290
Abāghā, Īl-Kbān of Persia, 175; and Leo III Abū’l-Aswār, governor of Dwin, 164 sq.
of Armenia, 176
Abū’l-'Atābiyah, Arab poet, 290
Abas Bagratuni, Armenian prince, 159 Abu'l-Faraj Isfabāni, Arab writer, 290; his
Abas, King of Armenia, 161
Book of Songs, 293
Abasgia, Abasgians (Abkhaz), King of, and Abū’l-Fidā, on death of Kai-Khusrū I, 484
Basil II, 95, see Bagarat, Ber
note
'Abbās, Abbasid prince, defeats Byzantines, Abū’l-Futūḥ, Arab mystical author, 306
Abū’l Maḥāsin, 133 note
'Abbās, son of the Caliph Ma'mūn, 128 sq. ; Abu'l-Qāsim, Turkish emir of Nicaea, and
conspires against Mu'tasim, 130
Alexius I, 331
‘Abbās ibn al-Fadl ibn Ya'qūb, commander Abū-Muslim, governor of Rai, and Sultan
in Sicily, 137; death of, 138
Barkiyāruq, 309
*Abbās ibn al-Walid, Umayyad prince, Abū-Nasr al-Kunduri, vizier of Țughril Beg,
general in Paphlagonia, 120
305
Abbasid dynasty of Caliphs at Baghdad, 36, Abū-Nuwās, Arab poet, 290
38, 122; decline of, 151 sq. , 157, 277 sqq. , Abū-Sa'id, emir of Syria and Mesopotamia,
302; civilization during, Chap. X (A) 130, 132
passim; religious orthodoxy of, 288, 292, Abū-Saʻid, Īl-Khān of Persia, 644, 652
301; literature under, 289 sqq. ; churches Abū ſālib al-Makki, author of Sufi treatise
built under, 289; dynasty at Cairo, 279; Sustenance of the Souls, 293
see Caliphs
Abydos, Bardas Phocas defeated at, 88 sqq. ;
*Abd-al-Aziz, Saracen emir, captured by 119; captured by Saracens, 141; 344;
Nicephorus Phocas, 69
captured by Latins, 424; 481
•Abd-al-Kabir, Saracen general, 124
Acarnania, assigned to Venetians, 421; held
*Abdallāh, Abbasid prince, emir of Syria, 122 by Carlo Tocco, 461; by Serbia, 543, 552
*Abdallāh ibn Tāhir, Saracen general, 127 Acciajuoli, Florentine family, and duchy
'Abdallah ibn Tūmait, founder of the of Athens, 431, 454; see Antonio, Fran.
Almohad dynasty, 306
cesco, Franco, Nerio, Niccolò
•Abd-al-Malik, emir of Mesopotamia, cap- Achaia, principality of, founded, 422, 433 sq. ;
tures Camacha, 125 sq.
423; 431; organization of, 437; 443;
*Abd-al-Wahhāb, Abbasid prince, emir of Charles of Naples becomes Prince, 446;
Mesopotamia, 122
given to Philip of Taranto, 448 sq. ;
'Abd-ar-Rahim, invades Armenia, 156
claimantsfor, 452; held by John of Gravina,
Abd-ar-Rahmān, Saracen general, 125 sq. 453; 454; conquered by Navarrese, 456; rule
'Abd-ar-Rahmān, Umayyad prince, conquers of Zaccaria in, 459; becomes Byzantine,
Spain, 275, 300
460; 511; Latin Church in, 606; 609;
Abd-ar-Raḥmān, farms Mongol taxes, 640 Turks in, 675, 689; Table of rulers, 474;
Abgar, King of Edessa, supposed relics of see also Geoffrey, Isabelle, William
Our Lord possessed by him, 63, 150 Achelous, town of, 552
Abhari, author of textbook of logic, 297 Achilleus, St, bishop of Larissa, 240; church
Abkhaz, see Abasgians
of, at Prespa, 245
Aboba, see Pliska
Acominatus, see Michael, Nicetas
Abubacer (Ibn Tufail), Spanish Arab philo- Acre (St Jean d'Acre), 376; captured by
sopher, 296
Turks, 469; Venetians at, 510; 643
Abu-Dinār, Saracen admiral, 131
Acrocorinth, fortress of, 433, 436; sur-
Abū-Firās, Arab poet, captured by Nice- renders to Turks, 463
phorus II, 144 sq.
Acroïnon, in Phrygia, victory of Leo III at,
Abū-Isḥāq ash-Shīrāzī, author of legal 3, 121
treatises, 306
Acroïnon (Prymnessus), 120
Abū’l-'Abbās, Saracen chief, captures Reggio, Acropolis, the, at Athens, 443;/454; 456 sq. ;
141
463; holds out against Turks, 458, 464;
## p. 910 (#952) ############################################
910
Index
on, 433
, 129 sq. ;
fortifications on, 462; church of Our Lady
Acropolita, George, Byzantine historian,
765; on death of Kai-Khusrū, 484 note;
422 note; sent as envoy to Michael of
Epirus, 494 sq. ; on death of Empress
Irene, 495; 499; funeral oration on
John III, 500; and Theodore II, 502, 506;
taken prisoner by Epirotes, 504, 508; 505;
509 note; sent to Bulgaria, 510, 525; 513
Acyndinus, Gregory, Byzantine scholastic
philosopher, 766
Adalbert, see Vojtěch, St
Adalia, see Attalia
Adam, archbishop. (Pseudo-Brochart), on
condition of Serbia, 537; 539 note
Adam, Armenian commander against Sel-
jūgs, 173 sq.
Adam, Muslim belief concerning, 286
Adana, in Cilicia, in Saracen wars, 120,
122, 124, 127 sqq. , 145; victory of Nice-
phorus Phocas at, 141; held by Armenian
Kingdom, 168 sq. , 358; 340 sq. ; restored
to Byzantium, 343, 359; taken by Mam-
lūks, 669; council of, 179
Adata, pass of, 122 sqq. , 127, Saracen
military colony at, 132
Adelaide, Empress, wife of Otto I, 402
Adelaide, wife of Géza, Prince of the Magyars,
213
Adelchis, Lombard prince, son of Desiderius,
19, 22
Ademar of Puy, Papal legate at the First
Crusade, 337
Adernesih, curopalates of Iberia, and
Romanus I, 62
Ádharbayjan, see Azarbā'ījān
Adib Şābir, poet, and envoy of Sanjar, 313
Adramyttium, 344; taken by Henry of
Flanders, 422, 424; Genoese at, 431, 511;
Hospitallers at, 480; 481; 485
Adrasus, in Isauria, 125 note
Adria, territory of, 402
Adriatic Sea, Byzantine fleet in, 10, 36, 394;
Saracens in, 39, 139; Bulgaria on, 241;
crossed by Normans, 329; Venice and,
Chap. XII passim; 436; 504; 523; Serbia
on, 535; 537; 541; Bosnia on, 544, 559;
553; 565; 568; 570; "an Italian lake,"
583; 584; 637; themes on, 733; 742
Adscriptitii, 5
AŅud-ud-Daulah, Buwaihid prince, 289,
297
Aegean Sea, Saracen piracy in, 45, 127 sq. ,
141, 144; 131; under Latin domination,
Chap.
