Paulician

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Paulician
Paulician, n. and a. Ch. Hist. (pɔːˈlɪʃ(ɪ)ən) [ad. L. Pauliciānī, a. Gr. Παυλικιανοί, of obscure origin, thought by some to be from Paulus Paul.] A. n. A member of a sect which arose in Armenia in the 7th century, holding modified Manichæan opinions. B. adj. Of or belonging to this sect.1727–41 Cham... Oxford English Dictionary
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Paulician dialect
The Paulician dialect () is a Bulgarian dialect of the Rhodopean group of the Rup dialects. The Paulician dialect is almost entirely surrounded by the Central Balkan dialect. wikipedia.org
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Leka (Paulician leader)
The Pechenegs north of the Danube in the 11th century had been influenced by Paulician ideas. The attestation of a Paulician Albanian suggests that Paulicians had become popular among Albanian groups. wikipedia.org
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Paulicianism
Destruction of Paulician state and displacement By 878, the emperor Basil I had conquered the Paulician strongholds in Asia Minor (including Tephrike) and the survivors from the destruction of the Paulician state were largely displaced. wikipedia.org
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Publican
ˈPublican, n.2 Eccl. Hist. Forms: 5 Popelican, -quan, 7 Poblican, 6– Publican. [ME. popelican, a. OF. popelican, publican, ad. med.L. Pop(e)licān-us, Publicān-us, altered from med.Gr. Παυλικιαν-ός (υ= v) Paulician, in allusion to, or by confusion with, L. pūblicānus publican1.] A name applied to the... Oxford English Dictionary
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Tondrakians
The Tondrakian movement resembled the Paulician movement in many ways, and various scholars consider it a continuation of the Paulician movement under The Paulician movement was of a social nature and simultaneously a resistance movement, directed against the Arabs and Byzantines, while the Tondrakian wikipedia.org
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Sergius-Tychicus
In 801, after joining the Astati at Argaoun (now Arguvan), he founded the Paulician Church of the Colossians. wikipedia.org
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Hrach Bartikyan
A number of his articles centered on the Paulician and Tondrakian heretical sects and connections between medieval Armenian and Byzantine Greek literature Selected publications Istochniki dlia izucheniia istorii pavlikanskogo dvizheniia [Sources on the study of the history of the Paulician movement]. wikipedia.org
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بيلكانيون
The Key of Truth, A Manual of the Paulician Church of Armenia, edited and translated by F. C. Conybeare, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1898. S. B. truth, a manual of the Paulician church of Armenia المسيحية في القرن 8 عبارات مسيحية مسيحية القرن 7 مسيحية القرن 9 wikipedia.org
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Chrysocheir
Biography According to the Byzantine chroniclers, Chrysocheir was a nephew of the Paulician leader Karbeas. It was not until six years later, however, that Tephrike itself fell to the Byzantines, putting an end to the Paulician principality. wikipedia.org
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Josephines
He connects them to a seventh-century Paulician sect claiming descent from Josephus Epaphroditus, already recognised as a spurious figure by Peter of Sicily wikipedia.org
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Leo Argyros (9th century)
He participated in the pogrom of 843 against the Paulicians, and distinguished himself in the border wars against the Arabs and their Paulician allies. wikipedia.org
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Petrus Siculus
According the narrative contained within the History, Peter was sent as a legate from the Byzantine emperor Basil I to the Paulician leader Chrysocheir He stayed in the Paulician city of Tephrike/Tibrica, now Divriği in Turkey, on the upper Euphrates, for nine months, and wrote the text during this time wikipedia.org
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Christopher (Domestic of the Schools)
This success was followed, whether immediately afterwards or a few years later, by the sack of the Paulician capital, Tephrike, and the extinction of their wikipedia.org
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Karbeas
Karbeas (), also Karbaias (), was a Paulician leader, who, following the anti-Paulician pogroms in 843, abandoned his service in the Byzantine army and With the aid of the emir of Melitene, Umar al-Aqta, he founded the Paulician principality of Tephrike, which he ruled until his death in 863. wikipedia.org
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