Evagrius Scholasticus, Ecclesiastical History (AD431-594), translated by E. Walford (1846). General Index
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ABASGI converted | 213 |
Acacius, bishop of Melitene | 8 |
————, patriarch of Constantinople, 79 ; advises the Henoticon | 135 |
————, bishop of Ariathia | 90 |
Adaarmanes, a Persian general, 258 ; destroys Apamea | 202 |
Addaeus and Aetherius executed | 248 |
Aetius, death of | 68 |
Alamundarus, the Arab, invades the empire, 202 ; his treachery, 277 ; and punishment | 286 |
Alexandria, commotions at, | 63, 149 |
Amalasuntha, queen of the Goths | 211 |
Amida taken by the Persians | 171 |
Anastasius, a presbyter, and partizan of Nestorius | 5 |
———————, the emperor, accession of, 157 ; deposes certain bishops, 159 ; deposes Macedonius and Flavian, 164; his humanity, 169 ; his name erased from the sacred diptychs, 169 ; founds Daras, 172; builds the Long Wall, 172 ; abolishes the Chrysargyrum, 173; establishes the Gold-rate, 184; offers to resign his crown, 187 ; his death | 188 |
———————, patriarch of Antioch, character of, 242; deposed | 254 |
Anatolius, patriarch of Constantinople, dies | 79 |
———— , a person of mean extraction, convicted of sorcery, 272; conveyed to Constantinople, 273; executed | 274 |
Anthemius, emperor of the West, | 84 |
Antioch, earthquakes at, 80, 271, 292 ; fire and earthquake, 192, 194 | |
Arabs invade the empire, | 171, 202 |
Armatus put to death by Zeno, | 151 |
Athalaric, son of Theodoric | 211 |
Avars advance to the Danube, 246 ; invade the empire | 295 |
Augustulus, emperor of the West | 85 |
Avitus, emperor of the West | 69 |
Babylas, his relics removed | 32 |
Barsanuphius, an ascetic | 230 |
Basiliscus assumes the purple, 121; restores Timothy Aelurus to his see, 121; issues a circular letter, 122; a counter circular, 129; his death | 131 |
Belisarius defeats the Persians, 202 ; takes Carthage, 208 ; returns in triumph, 209 ; recovers Home, 211; a second time, 212; captures Vitiges | 212 |
Cabaones, the Moor, defeats Thrasamund | 206 |
Calandion, patriarch of Antioch, 133; banished | 140 |
Celestine, pope, writes to Nestorius | 6 |
Chalcedon, council of, 51, 86; definition of faith there framed | 58 |
Chosroes I. invades the empire, 215 ; takes Antioch, 216 ; besieges Edessa, 219 ; and Sergiopolis, 222; takes Daras, 263; makes a truce with the Romans, 265 ; defeated, 268 ; his death | 270 |
————— II., flies to the Romans, 304 ; restored, 306 ; his offerings | 307 |
Chrysargyrum abolished | 175 |
Constantinople, conflagration at, 81; violent rains, 83; sedition, 203 ; miracle, 235 ; second council of | 237 |
Cyril, patriarch of Alexandria, writes to Nestorius, 6, | 103 |
——, prior of the Acoemets | 145 |
Dioscorus, patriarch of Alexandria, presides in the second council of Ephesus, 19 ; deposed, 57, | 102 |
Domnus, patriarch of Antioch, deposed, 20; visits Simeon the Stylite | 24 |
Drought, famine, and pestilence in Asia | 67 |
Earthquakes, | 83, 186, 192, 197, 271, 292 |
Edessa besieged by Chosroes | 219 |
Ephesus, first council of, | 6 |
——, second | 19 |
Ephraemius, patriarch of Antioch | 193 |
Epistle from the Asiatic bishops to Acacius | 132 |
Euphrasius, patriarch of Antioch | 192 |
Eusebius, bishop of Dorylaeum, charges Eutyches with heresy, 18 ; deposed, 20; petitions the emperor, 52, | 87 |
Eutyches, his deposition revoked | 20 |
Felix, pope, issues a sentence of deposition against Acacius, 144 ; writes to Zeno | 145 |
Flavian, patriarch of Constantinople, 18; deposed | 20 |
Gelimer, king of the Vandals, taken prisoner | 209 |
Gennadeus, patriarch of Constantinople | 79 |
Genseric takes Rome | 68 |
Germanus elected emperor by the mutinous troops, 289; defeats the barbarians, 294 ; pardoned by Maurice | 295 |
Glycerius, emperor of the West | 85 |
Golanduch, a female martyr | 306 |
Gregory, patriarch of Antioch, his character, 254 ; in danger from the populace, 273; accused of incest, and acquitted, 291; his mission to the mutinous troops, 295; his oration, 296 ; sent to meet Chosroes II., 305; his death | 313 |
Henoticon of Zeno | 135 |
Heruli converted | 212 |
Hormisdas, son of Chosroes I., his accession,270; assassinated | 303 |
Huneric persecutes the orthodox | 203 |
Ignatius, his relics removed | 32 |
Illus and Leontius, their insurrection crushed | 155 |
Isidore of Pelusium | 30 |
John, patriarch of Antioch, deposes Cyril and Memnon | 9 |
——, patriarch of Constantinople | 241 |
Justin I, his accession | 189 |
——— II., his accession, 245; edict, 249 ; insanity, 263; confers on Tiberius the dignity of Caesar | 265 |
—————, kinsman of Justin II., murdered | 247 |
Justinian, the emperor, his accession, 198; upholds the council of Chalcedon, 199; deposes Anthimus and Theodosius, 200 ; sends Belisarius against the Vandals, 207 ; restores to Jerusalem the spoils taken by Titus, 209; his avarice, 226; favours the blue faction, 229 ; his heterodoxy, 241 ; death | 244 |
—————, the general, defeats Chosroes, 268; invades Persia | 270 |
Kurs, a Scythian chieftain, routs the Persians | 268 |
Leo, the emperor, issues a circular letter, 75 ; his death | 85 |
Longinus overthrown | 170 |
Long-Wall built | 172 |
Majorian, emperor of the West | 69 |
Maminianus beautifies Antioch | 156 |
Marcian, the emperor, present at the council of Chalcedon, 64, 116; his death | 69 |
————, the general, besieges Nisibis, 258 ; superseded | 260 |
Martyropolis betrayed to the Persians | 300 |
Maurice, the emperor, his character, 275: defeats the Persians, 277 ; his succession to the empire fore-shown, 278 ; his accession, 279 ; marries Constantina, 284; his virtues, 285; clemency to the mutineers, 295 ; protects Chosroes II | 304 |
Maximianus, patriarch of Constantinople | 18 |
Maximus, emperor of the West | 68 |
Memnon, bishop of Ephesus, | 7, 9 |
Moors, their origin | 209 |
Naamanes, the Arab, converted | 310 |
Narses, his piety, 214; defeats Totila and Teia | 214 |
Nepos, emperor of the West | 85 |
Nestorius deposed by the council of Ephesus, 8; retires to the monastery of Euprepius, 13; captured by the Blemmyes, 14 ; his death | 17 |
Odoacer, king of Rome, 85; overthrown | 155 |
Olybrius, emperor of the West | 85 |
Origen, his opinions condemned by the fifth general council | 240 |
Paul, bishop of Emesa | 10 |
Pestilence of fifty years' duration | 223 |
Peter the Fuller, patriarch of Antioch, 141 ; writes to Acacius | 141 |
——— Mongus, patriarch of Alexandria | 134 |
Philippicus defeats the Persians, 287 ; sent to quell a mutiny, 290; defeats the Persians | 302 |
Priscus, mutiny of his troops | 288 |
Proclus, patriarch of Constantinople | 18 |
Proterius, patriarch of Alexandria, murdered | 71 |
Rhodes visited by an earthquake | 180 |
Ricimer murders Majorian | 69 |
Rome taken by Genseric | 68 |
St. Euphemia, church of, 49; miracles | 51 |
St. Sophia, church of | 277 |
Sergiopolis, miraculous deliverance of | 222 |
Severus, emperor of the West | 69 |
————, patriarch of Antioch, 165; abandons his see | 192 |
Silverius, pope | 211 |
Simeon the Stylite, 24; his remains conveyed to Antioch, 27 ; miracles, 29; addresses letters to the emperor Leo, and Basil, patriarch of Antioch | 78 |
————— ——— —— the younger | 311 |
———, a monk of Emesa | 231 |
Simplicius, pope | 140 |
Stephen, patriarch of Antioch | 133 |
Synesius of Cyrene | 30 |
Theodoret, bishop of Cyrus, deposed, 20; re-instated, | 62, 117 |
Theodoric, the Scythian, his insurrection and death | 152 |
—————, the Goth, takes Rome and makes himself king | 155 |
Theodosius, the younger, summons the council of Ephesus, 6 ; condemns Nestorius, 24; rebuked by Simeon | 26 |
Theodotus, bishop of Ancyra | 8 |
Thomas, bishop of Apamea, courts Chosroes, 216; displays the wood of the cross | 217 |
Timothy Aelurus, patriarch of Alexandria, 70; banished, 79 ; restored, 121 ; enthrones Paul at Ephesus | 128 |
Totila seizes Rome, 212 ; overthrown by Narses | 214 |
Valentinian III., his death | 68 |
Varamus dethrones Hormisdas, 303; defeats Chosroes II., 304; defeated | 306 |
Vardanes heads the, Armenian revolt | 257 |
Verina favours Leo | 85 |
Vitalian revolts, 185; defeated by sea, 186; assassinated | 191 |
Xenaias, his violence | 160 |
Zeno, the emperor, marries Ariadne, 84 ; murders Aspar, 84; assumes the purple, 85 ; his character, 119; flies from Basiliscus, 121; restored, 131; issues the Henoticon, 135; writes to pope Felix, 146; puts to death Armatus, 151 ; his death | 156 |
Zosimas, the monk, his miracles | 194 |
Zosimus, the historian, refutation of | 177 |
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