Z305general.html 491 Anastasius' accession to the throne Marries Ariadne (zeno's widow) Riot in Constantinople 511/12Synod of sidon pre 512 Tax collection is handed over to http://www.kcl.ac.uk/kis/schools/hums/byzmodgreek/Z305/Z305general.html
Extractions: The Roman World in the Reigns of Anastasius and Justinian AD 491-565 Introductory Reading and Key Dates Key Dates for the reign of Zeno, AD 474-491 February 474 : Zeno becomes co-emperor with Leo II November 474 : Leo II dies and Zeno becomes sole emperor : Perpetual peace is concluded with the Vandals in Africa June 474 : Julius Nepos becomes the Western Roman Emperor : The usurpation of Basiliscus orchestrated by Verina August 475 : Flight of Nepos to Ravenna. Rule of the West by Orestes in the name of his son, Romulus Augustulus August 476 : Rule of Italy by Odoacer as "king" August 476 : Return of Zeno with the help of Illus : Fighting between Zeno and Theoderic (son of Theodericus) and Theoderic Strabo (son of Triarius) : Consulship of Illus : Failed plot of Verina against Illus; Verina is handed over to Illus. End 479 : Revolt of Marcian : Attack on Illus orchestrated by Ariadne : Death of Theoderic Strabo : Illus moves to Antioch ( magister militum per Orientem : the Henotikon : Legislation to prohibit monopolies and the raising of prices : Peace between Zeno and Theoderic; Theoderic kills Recitach, Theoderic Strabo's successor and united the Goths under his leadership.
Stoic History Persaeus of Citium, taught by zeno. Aratus of Soli, taught by zeno. Boethusof sidon, taught by Diogenes. Hecaton of Rhodes, taught by Panaetius. http://www.cnu.edu/academics/phil/carr/StoicBio.htm
Extractions: Mid Zeno of Citium (344/34-263/2), taught Cleanthes son of Phanias of Assos (331-232) (head263-232), taught Chrysippus of Soli (b280.; head 232-d207/6), taught Zeno of Tarsus (head from 206) Ariston "the Bald", son of Miltiades of Chios, (fl. 270-50?) taught by Zeno, became a heretic Herillus of Carthage, taught by Zeno, became a heretic Dionysius, taught by Zeno Persaeus of Citium, taught by Zeno Aratus of Soli, taught by Zeno Sphaerus of the Bosphorus, taught by Cleanthes, tutor of Cleomenes the king of Sparta and Ptolemy Philopater of Alexandria Eratosthenes of Cyrene (c276-196) Diogenes of Seleucia (Babylon) (head until 152), taught by Chrysippus, taught Antipater of Tarsus ( head c150-129) Panaetius of Rhodes (185-110; head from 129)
Early Stoic Philosophers Now the Athenians had a great respect for zeno, so that they gave him the And theCittiaeans, in the district of sidon, also claimed him as their countryman. http://www.assateague.org/Stoics/Zeno/stoics.html
Extractions: Chrysippus (c. 280 - c. 207 B.C.) [You can print out any page by (a) clicking on the page and then (b) clicking on Print on your browser's File Menu.] Short Notes The readings are from Diogenes Laërtius, an early 3rd century Greek biographer whose Lives of the Eminent Philosophers includes ten books on the lives and opinions of the philosophers from Thales to Epicurus. His Lives , a mix of verifiable facts and fabrications, is an important source of information on the development of Greek philosophy. In Book VII, Diogenes Laërtius provides the following on Zeno (c. 336 - c. 265 B.C.) and the origin of the term "Stoics" as applied to his pupils: And he used to walk up and down in the beautiful colonnade which is called the Priscanactium, and which is also called poikilê, from the paintings of Polygnotus, and there he delivered his discourses, wishing to make that spot tranquil; for in the time of the thirty, nearly fourteen hundred of the citizens had been murdered there by them. Accordingly, for the future, men came thither to hear him, and from this his pupils were called Stoics, and so were his successors also, who had been at first called Zenonians, as Epicurus tells us in his Epistles. And before this time, the poets who frequented this colonnade (stoa) had been called Stoics, as we are informed by Eratosthenes, in the eighth book of his treatise on the Old Comedy; but now Zenos pupils made the name more notorious. Now the Athenians had a great respect for Zeno, so that they gave him the keys of their walls, and they also honoured him with a golden crown, and a brazen statue; and this was also done by his own countrymen, who thought the statue of such a man an honour to their city. And the Cittiaeans, in the district of Sidon, also claimed him as their countryman.
Tyre (Marwan's Birth Place) zeno (Zainoon), philosopher and founder of the Stoic School. Ethbaal, Kingof Tyre sidon, father of the notorious Jezebel (wife of King Ahab.). http://www.kadado.com/gallery/lebanon/tyre.htm
Extractions: Modern Arabic Sur, French Tyr or Sour, English Tyre, Latin Tyrus. Location History Archeological Sites (Pictures) ... Famous Tyreans Marwan's home town, Tyre, is on the Mediterranean coast of southern Lebanon, located 12 miles (19 km) north of the modern border with Israel and 25 miles (40 km) south of Sidon (modern Sayda). It was a major Phoenician seaport from about 2000 BC through the Roman period. Tyre, built on an island and on the neighboring mainland, was probably originally founded as a colony of Sidon. Mentioned in Egyptian records of the 14th century BC as being subject to Egypt, Tyre became independent when Egyptian influence in Phoenicia declined. It later surpassed Sidon as a trade center, developing commercial relations with all parts of the Mediterranean world. In the 9th century BC colonists from Tyre founded the North African city of Carthage, which later became Rome's principal rival in the West. The town is frequently mentioned in the Bible (Old and New Testaments) as having had close ties with biblical Israel. In the 10th and 9th centuries Tyre probably enjoyed some primacy over the other cities of Phoenicia and was ruled by kings whose power was limited by a merchant oligarchy. For much of the 8th and 7th centuries BC the town was subject to Assyria, and in 585-573 it successfully withstood a prolonged siege by the Babylonian king Nebuchadrezzar II. Between 538 and 332 it was ruled by the Achaemenian kings of Persia. In this period it lost its hegemony in Phoenicia but continued to flourish.
Vornamen: Z Translate this page Nebenform von Sara, Zdenko, aus sidon in Phönizien stammend, latein. tschechischeForm von sidonius, zeno, nach dem Göttervater Zeus, griech. zeno. http://www.heiligenlexikon.de/Vornamen/Z.htm
Extractions: Name Bedeutung Herkunft Ableitung Heilige(r) Zacharias Gott hat sich erinnert hebr. - griech. Zacharias Zacharias Gott hat sich erinnert hebr. griech. Form von Sacharja Zarah die Vornehme hebr. Nebenform von Sara Zdenko latein. tschechische Form von Sidonius Zeno griech. Zeno Zena Leben aus Zeus griech. - latein. englische Nebeform von Zenobia Zenobia Leben aus Zeus griech. - latein. weibliche Form von Zenobius Zenobia Zenobius Leben aus Zeus griech. - latein. Zenobius Zenzi die (im Glauben) Wachsende latein. Kreszentia Zephyrinus der Westwind griech. - latein Zephyrinus Zeus der Tag griech. Zilla aus der latein. Zilly aus der latein Zita latein. Zita die Lebendige griech. Zosimus der Lebendigste griech. - latein. Zosimus
Angie Bowie's Personal Tribute To Cyprus - Part Two Merchants and traders from the Phoenician cities of Tyre and sidon conducted commercewith Cyprus. Their rule lasted for 300 years. zeno The Hellenistic Age. http://www.bettyjack.com/angie/jewel.html
Extractions: People make history. How about a gallop through Cypriot history? We'll slow down to a trot as we come to the interesting characters. Maybe we'll arrive at now with a deeper understanding of the rivalries and rumors that affect human response. 3000 years ago, the Mediterranean was the center of the known world. The inhabitants shared a common experience: food, wine, climate. Their occupations were mining, agriculture, metal-smithing, herding of livestock and fishing, though not much in Cyprus. The people on whom to focus are the Cypriots, their conquerors and neighbors, philosophers and clerics and small boys: Andreas Vassiliou is the most recent Cypriot hero. CYPRUS-Boy's plight mends rift. The plight of a 6-year-old boy whose life depends on finding a bone marrow donor has brought together the rival Greek and Turkish Cypriot communities of war-divided Cyprus. Scores of Turkish Cypriots crossed yesterday into the UN- controlled buffer zone splitting the island, for blood tests to see if they could provide a transplant to save Andreas Vassiliou, a Greek Cypriot boy suffering from Leukemia. "This is a very good development that will help build trust between the two sides, " said Mehemt Ali Talat of the opposition Republican Turkish Party. Cyprus has been divided into a Greek Cypriot controlled south and a Turkish occupied north since a 1974 Turkish invasion. The Turkish Cypriot State prevents free movement between the two areas except in rare cases. More than 50,000 Greek Cypriots have already come forward since the boy's father made a plea for donations nine days ago. Doctors say the chances of finding a suitable donor are 30,000 to one. "We are trying to help a little, we hope he gets better," said Serdar Denktash, son of Rauf Denktash, president of the Turkish Cypriot state. "This is a humanitarian action, nothing to do with politics." March 28th, 2000 AZ Daily Star
The Syrian Orthodox Church In the following year zeno issued his famous Henoticon, against the Formula of the Flavianinclined to the Chalcedonians, a council was held in sidon in 512 by http://wwwstaff.murdoch.edu.au/~t-issa/syr/details/church.htm
Extractions: The Syrian Orthodox Church, as well as the majority of the vast province of the Holy See of Antioch, rejected from the very beginning the council of Chalcedon. This caused the resignation of Patriarch Maximus in 455, and the fall of the Chalcedonian Patriarch Martyr and the installation in 468 of Peter II who is known as Fuller. This Church called those who were separated from her in accepting the council of Chalcedon, "MELKITES" which means in Syriac "the followers of the king". Our scholar Bar Ebraya calls them "Melkite Syrians". Our Church maintains firmly one person and one nature for Christ after the union, and the crucifixion of god, and the expression of Theotokos or God-bearer, after the example of St. Cyril of Alexandria and the third Ecumenical Council of Ephesus. Its Holy Fathers emphasised these teachings against both the Chalcedonians and Nestorians. The other denominations also admit that our Church not only has no connection with the heresy of Eutches, but also it condemns it along with its master. It is true that a small group from Constantinople, Alexandria and Palestine sided with Eutyches at the beginning but that vanished after a short period due to the influence of the orthodox scholars. WEB MASTERS File created: 14/02/95 10:31:02 PM
Sabellius He was a member of zenos Stoic school, and tutor to the Emperor Nero who The husbandof Dido, and a Phoenician of sidon, whom his brother, Pygmalion King of http://www.tonykline.free-online.co.uk/DantindexSTUVWXZ.htm
Extractions: Sabellius (3rd century). The Sabellian heresy identified the Son with the Father as one Person differing only in name. (It is later called Patripassianism ie. the Father suffers, and Modalism) Paradiso Canto XIII:91-142 . He is mentioned. Lucan , in Pharsalia ix 763 and 790, tells of the two soldiers of Cato s army who were stung by snakes while marching across Libya. Sabellus melted, while the other swelled. Inferno Canto XXV:79-151 . The story is mentioned. An ancient Florentine family. See the note to Paradiso Canto XVI Paradiso Canto XVI:88-154 . Mentioned. The Sultan or Soldan, Salhad-din, 1137-1193 AD , the Kurdish founder of the Ayyubid Dynasty of Egypt. He took Jerusalem in 1187 AD, after defeating the Christians earlier at the battle of The Horns of Hattin . He is Dantes type of Islamic nobility and magnificence. (See Scotts Ivanhoe for an image of how Saladin was perceived in terms of chivalry.) Inferno Canto IV:106-129 . He is among the heroes and heroines in Limbo. The daughter of Herodias, who was married to Herod Antipas, Tetrarch of Galilee, who was therefore Salomes stepfather. She danced before him and he granted her a request. Her mother Herodias whom
Biographien - Archiv Translate this page zeno, Bischof v. Verona (371) http//www.bautz.de/bbkl/z/zeno.shtml zenobia http//www.heiligenlexikon.de/BiographienZ/zenobius.htm zenon aus sidon http//www http://www.biografien-im-netz.de/archiv.php?Letter=Z&Page=150
Name Meaning Zdenek, one from sidon, a winding sheet, Czech, Boy. Zdenka, one from sidon,a winding sheet, Czech, Girl. Zenia, hospitable, Greek, Girl. zeno, of Zeus,Greek, Boy. http://www.babynameworld.com/z.asp
Extractions: The easiest stroller to fold. Designed to be folded with only one hand and in the simplest of ways it allows a parent to fold it (or open it) while carrying the child (or the usual array of things that parents always have). Zippy combines exceptional design with truly innovative features, studied to provide maximum comfort for parents and babies. For the parents this stroller provides....
Bryn Mawr Classical Review 96.9.24 On Anger. Some of them disseminate the thought of his teacher Zenoof sidon, whose lectures he attended in Athens. The trilogy, On http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/1996/96.09.24.html
Extractions: Reviewed by Alan C. Mitchell, Theology, Georgetown University, mitchela@gunet.georgetown.edu In a word this book is elegant. At the most basic level its appearance is handsome. More importantly, Gigante's rendering of Philodemus is fascinating and engaging, and Dirk Obbink's translation is masterful. Gigante presents an engrossing account of the relevance of Philodemus of Gadara and the critical importance of his private library at Herculaneum for the attestation of Italian Epicureanism in the first century BCE. His method is almost conversational as he tells the story of the excavation of the library, the deciphering of these difficult texts, and the significance of Philodemus' place in the history of Epicureanism. Along the way Gigante comments on the volume of Philodemus scholarship that has exposed the problems that prevent an easy portrayal of the evidence and its meaning. He dialogues with this scholarship in a manner that is both charming and critical. The first chapter opens with the story of the excavation of the Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum and its relevance for research on Epicureanism at Rome in the later Republic. Gigante predicts that expanded exploration will only increase the value of this find. The discovery of new texts is, perhaps for philologists like Gigante, the most exciting part of the excavations. While the bulk of the material from the library is Greek texts of Hellenistic philosophy, scholars can anticipate additional new texts, when the Latin part of the library is explored. Among the Latin papyri verses of books 1, 3, 4, and 5 of Lucretius' poem
Lebanese Consulate - Links Corner Bookstore. History. A Collection of Lebanese BankNotes zeno ofSidon, A Mathematician Lebanon/ Cedar/ Cedars in the Bible. ABZU http://www.lebconsny.org/Consulate General of Lebanon - New York_files/links.htm
Lagaffe.cs.berkeley.edu/quiz-bowl/quizzer/mentis78.txt Ans zeno (MENTOR's Note zeno of Citium, zeno of Elea and zeno ofSidon were all famous philosophers of ancient Greece.) Que 13. http://lagaffe.cs.berkeley.edu/quiz-bowl/quizzer/mentis78.txt
News Top of Page. History. A Collection of Lebanese BankNotes zeno ofSidon, A Mathematician Lebanon/ Cedar/ Cedars in the Bible. ABZU http://www.lebconsd.org/LINKS.htm
Philodemus In Translation? Philodemus in translation? Does anyone out there know if Philodemus, zeno ofSidon's disciple, is available in translation, either English or German? http://www.uni-heidelberg.de/subject/hd/fak7/hist/o1/logs/sophia/log.started9503
Extractions: Philodemus in translation? Does anyone out there know if Philodemus, Zeno of Sidon's disciple, is available in translation, either English or German? I'm after a copy of *peri parresia* (on Boldness/Frankness) that I can pillage without having to wade through acres of Greek. Thanks, Tim. Timothy Gaden - tjg@hermes.apana.org.au - Melbourne, Australia [Submitted by: tjg@hermes.apana.org.au (Timothy Gaden) Thu, 2 Mar 1995 09:29:22 GMT] Up
Euclides ter sido o primeiro a demonstrar que as proposições de Euclides não eram http://www.geocities.com/g10ap/matematicos/mat14.htm
Extractions: Euclides Euclides é o mais proeminente matemático da antigüidade, mais conhecido pelo seu tratado de Geometria "Os Elementos". A natureza perene de "Os Elementos" deve fazer de Euclides o maior professor de Matemática de todos os tempos. Pouco se sabe sobre a vida de Euclides, exceto que ele lecionou em Alexandria, no Egito. O trabalho mais famoso de Euclides, como já se disse, é o seu tratado de geometria "Os Elementos". O livro foi uma compilação do conhecimento geométrico que se tornou o centro do ensino de Matemática por 2000 anos. Provavelmente nenhum dos resultados de "Os Elementos" foram demonstradas primeiramente por ele, mas a organização do material e sua exposição certamente devemos a ele. O livro "Os Elementos" começa pela definição dos axiomas, incluindo o quinto postulado (ou "das paralelas") que diz que "uma e apenas uma linha pode ser traçada através de um ponto paralela de uma determinada linha". A decisão de Euclides de tornar esta definição em um axioma levou ao surgimento da Geometria Euclidiana. Somente no século XIX este axioma foi posto de lado e a geometria não-euclidiana começou a ser estudada. Zeno de Sidon, cerca de 250 anos após Euclides ter escrito "Os Elementos", parece ter sido o primeiro a demonstrar que as proposições de Euclides não eram deduzidas a partir dos axiomas isoladamente, e que Euclides fez outras descobertas significativas.
Mario's Cyberspace Station: Lebanon Lebanon. National News Agency News Agency, English National News AgencyNews Agency, French National News Agency News Agency, Arabic http://mprofaca.cro.net/news070a.html
Extractions: Since 1985 the Beirut Times (weekly) has served the informational and social needs unique to the Arab Americans. Founder and Editor-in-Chief, Mr. Michael Absi, insures a specialized press that guides newly arrived immigrants to be assimilated into the local culture. Beirut Times' site provides a free sample issue (USA only), along with reader profiles, and general information. Reports online focus on the Arab-American media impact, influence, and markets.