77:
explains that the metropolitan of
Amaseia, one Callistus, who had been appointed to fill a long-standing vacancy in 1315, had been unable to enter his see and in 1317 a synodal decree directed him to reside in Limnia "until conditions improved and the Turks would permit him to enter Amaseia."
81:
In 1384 is the final reference to a bishop of Limnia: a surviving document records that the bishop was directed to take over the administration of
Amaseia because the metropolitan could not enter the territory. In 1386, Tajeddin
218:
88:, emir of Limnia, was succeeded by his son Altamur. Between the two dates, Limnia irrevocably slipped from Trapezuntine control and became a
168:
The
Decline of Medieval Hellenism in Asia Minor and the Process of Islamization from the Eleventh through the Fifteenth Century
223:
53:
in the winter solstice of 1140. By the next century, it had "finally became the
Trapezuntine stronghold of Limnia, with a
228:
139:
Original-Fragmente, Chroniken, Inschiften und anderes
Materiale zur Geschichte des Kaiserthums Trapezunt
192:
Anthony Bryer, "The littoral of the empire of
Trebizond in two fourteenth-century portolano maps",
65:
died while in Limnia. In 1317, according to Bryer, although it "was the last and lowliest of the
93:
36:
62:
8:
28:
84:
73:
its bishops assumed the metropolitan rights of the inland city." On the other hand,
97:
50:
46:
74:
58:
20:
212:
54:
42:
89:
143:
Abhandlungen der historischen Classe der königlich bayerischen
Akademie
117:
66:
32:
70:
61:
until the sixteenth century." In 1297, the
Trapezuntine Emperor
145:
4 (1844), abth. 1, pp. 12f; German translation, p. 43
170:(Berkeley: University of California, 1971), pp. 324f
219:
Administrative divisions of the Empire of
Trebizond
92:possession. Its latest mention is in 1580, on the
27:) was the westernmost subdivision of the medieval
210:
57:and thirteen imperial fortresses; it figures on
31:, consisting of the southern coastline of the
153:
151:
137:Panaretos, Chronicle, ch. 4. Greek text in
118:"Greeks and Türkmens: The Pontic Exception"
49:supply base named Kinte, used by Emperor
148:
211:
157:Bryer, "Greeks and Türkmens", p. 129
13:
14:
240:
186:
173:
160:
131:
110:
1:
181:Decline of Medieval Hellenism
103:
224:Historical regions in Turkey
7:
10:
245:
229:History of Samsun Province
24:
45:traces its origins to a
35:around the mouth of the
63:John II Grand Komnenos
122:Dumbarton Oaks Papers
29:Empire of Trebizond
236:
201:
190:
184:
177:
171:
164:
158:
155:
146:
135:
129:
114:
51:John II Komnenos
37:Yeşilırmak River
26:
244:
243:
239:
238:
237:
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209:
208:
205:
204:
194:Archeion Pontou
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149:
136:
132:
115:
111:
106:
12:
11:
5:
242:
232:
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202:
200:(1961), p. 101
185:
172:
159:
147:
130:
128:(1975), p. 128
108:
107:
105:
102:
75:Speros Vryonis
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
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169:
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144:
141:, part 2; in
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127:
123:
119:
113:
109:
101:
99:
95:
91:
87:
86:
79:
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59:portolan maps
56:
52:
48:
44:
43:Anthony Bryer
40:
38:
34:
30:
22:
18:
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193:
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180:
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142:
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83:
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41:
16:
15:
213:Categories
104:References
67:suffragans
179:Vryonis,
166:Vryonis,
47:Byzantine
33:Black Sea
25:τα Λιμνία
183:, p. 291
98:Ortelius
90:Turkoman
116:Bryer,
71:Amaseia
85:çelebi
17:Limnia
21:Greek
96:of
94:map
69:of
55:see
215::
198:24
196:,
150:^
126:29
124:,
120:,
100:.
39:.
23::
19:(
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