front cover of Athenian Financial Documents of the Fifth Century
Athenian Financial Documents of the Fifth Century
Benjamin Dean Meritt
University of Michigan Press, 1932
Athenian Financial Documents of the Fifth Century is a consideration of Athenian financial records preserved on inscriptions in the Epigraphical Museum in Athens, Greece.
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front cover of Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fifth Century
Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fifth Century
Irfan Shahîd
Harvard University Press, 1989
Just as the Tanūkhids rose and fell as the principal Arab foederati of Byzantium in the fourth century, so too in the fifth did the Salīḥids. The century, practically terra incognita in the history of Arab-Byzantine relations, is explored in Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fifth Century by Irfan Shahîd, who recovers from the sources the political, military, ecclesiastical, and cultural history of the Arab foederati in Oriens and the Arabian Peninsula during this period. Unlike their predecessors or successors, the foederati of the fifth century lived in perfect harmony with Byzantium. Federate-imperial relations were smooth: the Arab horse reached as far as Pentapolis in the West and possibly took part in Leo’s expedition against the Vandals. They were staunchly orthodox and participated in two ecumenical councils, Ephesus and Chalcedon, where their voice was audible. But their more enduring contributions were cultural, and may be associated with Dāwūd (David), the Salīḥid king; Petrus, the bishop of the Parembole; and possibly also Elias, patriarch of Jerusalem (494–516), a Roman Arab. The federate culture gave impetus to the rise of the Arabic script, Arabic poetry, and a simple form of an Arabic liturgy—the foundation for cultural achievements in subsequent centuries.
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front cover of Christianity and Philosophical Culture in the Fifth Century
Christianity and Philosophical Culture in the Fifth Century
The controversy about the Human Soul in the West
Ernest Fortin
St. Augustine's Press, 2019


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