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describes it as "A luxuriant forest of cypresses, verdant and flowery slopes, a spring noiselessly pouring forth its calm and refreshing waters, these are the features which beseem that sacred spot."
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176:, the son of Simeon, wedded at its altar the granddaughter of that same Romanos. There too was solemnized the still more brilliant wedding of the youthful Emperor
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in 1825, and rebuilt in 1833. The cemetery of the church serves as the principal
Orthodox cemetery of the city, housing the tombs of many patriarchs.
283:
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168:, during one of his raids in the early 10th century, burnt it to the ground, and on his departure it was restored with added splendor by
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of
Constantinople in 1422. The church was greatly injured at the time, but not entirely destroyed until after the victory of
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140:, thriftily enlarged the church by means of the superfluous material that remained after the completion of
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Near the church was the Palace of the Pege, or of the Spring, to which the emperors annually removed on
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128:). When it was reported that a blind man had been restored to sight at the touch of its waters,
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According to 11th-century accounts, it was located north of
Constantinople, just outside the
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264:) remained in Greek Orthodox hands throughout the Ottoman period, becoming the site of a
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Not a vestige of the palace exists. Here were the headquarters of
Ottoman Sultan
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over the spring. Justinian, believing that a bath in the spring had cured him of
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Antony Robert
Littlewood, Henry Maguire, Joachim Wolschke-Bulmahn,
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in the palace, before her imprisonment in a dungeon and execution.
200:, and where they devoted a few weeks to their health. During the
144:. Twice destroyed by earthquake, it was successively rebuilt by
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hospital in the 18th century. The church was destroyed again by
66:) was the name of a palace and region outside the walls of the
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Near the centre of the plain is the spring called the
109:, and served as a spring or summer retreat for the
89:walls. Competing accounts place it seaward of the
260:The site of the church (nowadays the suburb of
8:
331:Burned buildings and structures in Turkey
212:, were for several weeks lodged there.
321:Quarters and suburbs of Constantinople
113:after them. The 6th-century historian
97:Residence of Justinian I and Theodora
7:
82:), known for its parks and gardens.
14:
216:House arrest of Maria of Antioch
16:Former palace in Constantinople
208:of France and his wife, Queen
1:
184:, the bewitching daughter of
152:, in the 8th century, and by
281:Grosvenor, Edwin Augustus,
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156:one hundred years later.
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294:, Dumbarton Oaks, 2002,
292:Byzantine garden culture
244:during his unsuccessful
236:Headquarters of Murad II
160:Burning and restoration
101:The place was loved by
186:John VI Kantakouzenos
172:. A generation later
346:Eleanor of Aquitaine
287:(1895), p. 485.
224:put Empress Dowager
210:Eleanor of Aquitaine
246:three months' siege
222:Andronikos Komnenos
170:Romanos I Lekapenos
164:The Bulgarian Tsar
33: /
256:Fate of the church
122:Life-giving Spring
111:Byzantine emperors
316:Byzantine palaces
300:978-0-88402-280-0
37:41.030°N 28.920°E
353:
226:Maria of Antioch
124:(Ζωοδόχος Πηγή,
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146:Irene of Athens
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284:Constantinople
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202:Second Crusade
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192:Second Crusade
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126:Zoodochos Pege
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72:Constantinople
42:41.030; 28.920
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198:Ascension Day
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230:house arrest
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142:Hagia Sophia
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55:
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341:Zeytinburnu
326:Justinian I
270:Janissaries
266:patriarchal
91:Golden Gate
56:Philopation
52:Philopatium
40: /
310:Categories
276:References
174:King Peter
148:, wife of
132:erected a
87:Blachernae
64:Φιλοπάτιον
28:28°55′12″E
25:41°01′48″N
250:Mehmed II
206:Louis VII
115:Procopius
103:Justinian
68:Byzantine
242:Murad II
220:In 1182
138:calculus
107:Theodora
76:Istanbul
74:(modern
70:capital
262:Balıklı
204:, King
154:Basil I
298:
228:under
182:Helena
180:, and
178:John V
166:Simeon
150:Leo IV
134:church
80:Turkey
130:Leo I
60:Greek
296:ISBN
105:and
54:or
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252:.
188:.
93:.
78:,
62::
58:(
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