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CORYCUS

  • Corycus
  • Archaeological site

    Strabo does not mention a town of Corycus, but reports a promontory so called at the location, but a town Corycus is mentioned by Livy (xxxiii. 20),

    Corycus

    Corycus

    Corycus

  • Corycus (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Corycus may refer to: Corycus (alga), a brown alga genus in the family Chordariaceae Hayton of Corycus, medieval Armenian historian places Corycus, a city

    Corycus (disambiguation)

    Corycus_(disambiguation)

  • Battle of Corycus
  • 191 BC naval battle of the Roman-Seleucid War

    The Battle of Corycus, also known as the Battle of Kissos, took place in September 191 BC. It was fought as part of the Roman–Seleucid War, pitting the

    Battle of Corycus

    Battle of Corycus

    Battle_of_Corycus

  • Corycus (Pamphylia)
  • Greek town in ancient Pamphylia, near Attaleia

    Corycus (Ancient Greek: Κώρυκος, romanized: Korykos) was a Greek town in ancient Pamphylia, near Attaleia. Strabo mention that Attalus II Philadelphus

    Corycus (Pamphylia)

    Corycus_(Pamphylia)

  • Corycus (Ionia)
  • is cited by Thucydides, who says that Corycus was in the territory of Erythrae. Thucydides writes that Corycus was the place where, during the Peloponnesian

    Corycus (Ionia)

    Corycus_(Ionia)

  • Hayton of Corycus
  • Armenian noble and historian (c. 1240 – c. 1310/1320)

    Hayton of Corycus, O.Praem (also Hethum, Het'um, and variants; Armenian: Հեթում Պատմիչ, romanized: Hetʿowm Patmičʿ, lit. 'Hethum the Historian'; c. 1240 –

    Hayton of Corycus

    Hayton of Corycus

    Hayton_of_Corycus

  • Corycus (Lycia)
  • Corycus (Ancient Greek: Κώρυκος, romanized: Korykos) was a Greek port city in ancient Lycia. The location of the city has not been determined with certainty

    Corycus (Lycia)

    Corycus_(Lycia)

  • Corycus (Crete)
  • Corycus or Korykos (Ancient Greek: Κώρυκος) was a town in the northwestern part of ancient Crete on the peninsula of the same name mentioned by Ptolemy

    Corycus (Crete)

    Corycus_(Crete)

  • Flag of Armenia
  • flags of Corycus, Alexandretta, and Tarson appear. With Alexandretta bearing a yellow flag with a green circle and yellow lion in the center, Corycus bearing

    Flag of Armenia

    Flag of Armenia

    Flag_of_Armenia

  • Kingdom of Cyprus
  • Medieval Christian kingdom established after the Third Crusade (1192–1489)

    Cyprus and, on the Anatolian mainland, Antalya between 1361 and 1373, and Corycus between 1361 and 1448.[citation needed] The island of Cyprus was conquered

    Kingdom of Cyprus

    Kingdom of Cyprus

    Kingdom_of_Cyprus

  • Oppian
  • 2nd-century Greco-Roman poet

    that his birthplace was Caesarea (now known as Anazarbus) or Corycus in Cilicia, or Corycus according to the Suda. All these cities were in the Roman province

    Oppian

    Oppian

  • SN 1054
  • Supernova in the constellation Taurus; visible from 1054 to 1056

    account is apparently also reflected in the Armenian chronicle of Hayton of Corycus (written before 1307). The relevant passage translated from the Armenian

    SN 1054

    SN 1054

    SN_1054

  • Oshin of Korikos
  • Oshin of Korikos (or Corycos) (died 1329) served as regent of the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia from 1320 to 1329. He was the son of the historian Hayton

    Oshin of Korikos

    Oshin_of_Korikos

  • Kızkalesi
  • Neighbourhood in Erdemli, Mersin, Turkey

    reorganisation, it was a town (belde). The town, known in Antiquity as Corycus or Korykos (Greek: Κώρυκος), is named after the ancient castle built on

    Kızkalesi

    Kızkalesi

    Kızkalesi

  • Sighnaq
  • Capital of the Blue Horde and Kazakh Khanate

    in other regions, especially in Transcaucasia. According to Hayton of Corycus, Sighnaq was located in the Karatau Mountains, from where the river Kara

    Sighnaq

    Sighnaq

    Sighnaq

  • Kitbuqa
  • Mongol general (died 1260)

    nativity of Our Lord. Kitbuqa worked at recovering the Holy Land. — Hayton of Corycus, La flor des estoires de la terre d'Orient (1307). In command of a force

    Kitbuqa

    Kitbuqa

  • Troy
  • Ancient city in northwest Asia Minor

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Troy

    Troy

    Troy

  • Erythrae
  • Ruined city of the Ionian League in present day İzmir, Turkey

    the Bay of Erythrae, at an equal distance from the mountains Mimas and Corycus, and directly opposite the island of Chios. It is recorded that excellent

    Erythrae

    Erythrae

    Erythrae

  • Hilario di Jesu Costa
  • as Apostolic Vicar of Eastern Tonking (1737–1754) and Titular Bishop of Corycus (1735–1737). Hilario a Jesu Costa was born in Pessinetto, Italy on 2 Sep

    Hilario di Jesu Costa

    Hilario_di_Jesu_Costa

  • Möngke Khan
  • Khan of the Mongol Empire from 1251 to 1259

    Royaume Armenien de Cilicie Claude Mutafian, p. 58, quoting Hayton of Corycus. Jack Weatherford Genghis Khan, p. 175. Emil Bretschneider tr. of Kirakos

    Möngke Khan

    Möngke Khan

    Möngke_Khan

  • Livre des merveilles (BNF Fr2810)
  • 15th century illuminated manuscript

    Wilhelm von Boldensele, Uzbeg, Benedict XII, John Mandeville, Hayton of Corycus, Riccoldo da Monte di Croce, and others. The manuscript contains 297 folios

    Livre des merveilles (BNF Fr2810)

    Livre des merveilles (BNF Fr2810)

    Livre_des_merveilles_(BNF_Fr2810)

  • Mongol Armenia
  • Mongol occupation of Armenia

    Christian-Mongol alliance against Mamluk Islam, advocated notably by Hayton of Corycus, were ignored by the Latin powers in the Levant, leading to the demise

    Mongol Armenia

    Mongol Armenia

    Mongol_Armenia

  • Elaiussa Sebaste
  • Human settlement

    survived into the late Roman and early Byzantine periods. When its neighbor Corycus began to flourish in the 6th century AD, Elaiussa Sebaste was slowly obliterated

    Elaiussa Sebaste

    Elaiussa Sebaste

    Elaiussa_Sebaste

  • Symbols of Islam
  • Something that represents the idea of Islam

    14th-century illustrations of the History of the Tatars by Hayton of Corycus (1243) shows both Mongols and Seljuqs using a variety of war ensigns. The

    Symbols of Islam

    Symbols of Islam

    Symbols_of_Islam

  • Naimans
  • 12th-century tribal confederation of the Mongolian Plateau

    AD, also called La flor des estoires de la terre d'Orient, by Hayton of Corycus in Novus orbis regionum ac insularum veteribus incognitarum, edited by

    Naimans

    Naimans

    Naimans

  • Crusades
  • Religious wars of the High Middle Ages

    called for a large crusade; and the Armenian prince-turned-monk Hayton of Corycus proposed a two-stage expedition. Amid frequent wars among Catholic powers

    Crusades

    Crusades

    Crusades

  • Hethum I
  • King of Armenian Cilicia from 1226 to 1270

    Claude Mutafian, Le Royaume Armenien de Cilicie, p.58, quoting Hayton of Corycus. Dashdondog, Bayarsaikhan (2011). The Mongols and the Armenians (1220-1335)

    Hethum I

    Hethum I

    Hethum_I

  • Gramvousa Peninsula
  • Peninsula in Crete

    which forms this point went by the name of Mount Corycus. Ptolemy mentions a city also called Corycus, and there is a passage in which Juvenal mentions

    Gramvousa Peninsula

    Gramvousa_Peninsula

  • Battle of Myonessus
  • Naval battle where Rome and Rhodes defeat the Seleucids

    Battle of Corycus, enabling it to take control of several cities including Dardanus and Sestos on the Hellespont. Following the Battle of Corycus, the Roman–Pergamene

    Battle of Myonessus

    Battle of Myonessus

    Battle_of_Myonessus

  • Pope Clement V
  • Head of the Catholic Church from 1305 to 1314

    Hayton of Corycus remitting his report on the Mongols La Flor des Estoires d'Orient, to Pope Clement V in 1307.

    Pope Clement V

    Pope Clement V

    Pope_Clement_V

  • Echidna (mythology)
  • Ancient Greek mythological monster

    "Arimoi"). The region in the vicinity of the ancient Cilician coastal city of Corycus (modern Kızkalesi, Turkey) is often associated with Typhon's birth. The

    Echidna (mythology)

    Echidna (mythology)

    Echidna_(mythology)

  • Erythras (Ionia)
  • Port town of ancient Ionia

    you come to Erythrae, first is Erae, a small city of the Teians, then Corycus, a lofty mountain, and a harbour under it, Casystes; and another harbour

    Erythras (Ionia)

    Erythras_(Ionia)

  • Eschiva of Ibelin (wife of Aimery)
  • Queen consort of Cyprus in the late 12th-century

    Aimery and Eschiva's deceased father. Leo placed them in the fortress of Corycus, from where Aimery soon retrieved them. After securing the release of Eschiva

    Eschiva of Ibelin (wife of Aimery)

    Eschiva_of_Ibelin_(wife_of_Aimery)

  • John II of Cyprus
  • King of Cyprus from 1432 to 1458

    1458 and his daughter Charlotte succeeded to the throne. During his rule, Corycus, the only Cypriot stronghold in mainland Anatolia, was lost to the Karamanids

    John II of Cyprus

    John II of Cyprus

    John_II_of_Cyprus

  • Gog and Magog
  • Pair of individuals, peoples, or lands in the Bible and the Quran

    Historia de Preliis, Richer of Senones, Matthew Paris, Marco Polo, Hayton of Corycus, Riccoldo da Monte di Croce, and the Continuation of Barhebraeus. Other

    Gog and Magog

    Gog and Magog

    Gog_and_Magog

  • Ibrahim II of Karaman
  • Beg of Karaman from 1424 to 1464

    Cilicia) destroyed the friendship. Ibrahim captured the important castle of Corycus in Mediterranean coast (modern Kızkalesi) from the kingdom of Cyprus in

    Ibrahim II of Karaman

    Ibrahim_II_of_Karaman

  • Procopius (usurper)
  • Roman usurper from 365 to 366

    Valens, who ruled from 365 to 366. Procopius was born in July 325, in Corycus, Cilicia (now Turkey). On his mother's side, Procopius was a maternal cousin

    Procopius (usurper)

    Procopius (usurper)

    Procopius_(usurper)

  • Mersin Province
  • Province of Turkey

    Canbazlı ruins Caracalla's inscription Cennet and Cehennem Cleopatra's gate Corycus Çanakçı rock tombs Dörtayak Gözlükule Kanlıdivane Karakabaklı Kırkkaşık

    Mersin Province

    Mersin Province

    Mersin_Province

  • Polyxenidas
  • Rhodian admiral of Antiochus III

    Livius, but Polyxenidas fought their combined fleets at the Battle of Corycus. The superiority of numbers, however, decided the victory in favour of

    Polyxenidas

    Polyxenidas

  • Cilicia (Roman province)
  • Roman province located in modern-day Turkey

    captured the town of Olympos before going on to capture Phaselis and subduing Corycus and a number of minor pirate strongholds. Then in 75 BC Vatia Isauricus

    Cilicia (Roman province)

    Cilicia (Roman province)

    Cilicia_(Roman_province)

  • Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia
  • State in southern Anatolia (1080–1375)

    Claude Mutafian, Le Royaume Armenien de Cilicie, p.58, quoting Hayton of Corycus. Donal Stewart, Angus (2001). The Armenian Kingdom and the Mamluks: War

    Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia

    Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia

    Armenian_Kingdom_of_Cilicia

  • Limonlu River
  • River in Turkey

    water from the river west to the ancient towns of Elaiussa Sebaste and Corycus. The ancient name of the river was Lamos (Λάμος, Latinised as Lamus, Arabic:

    Limonlu River

    Limonlu River

    Limonlu_River

  • Sebeos
  • 7th-century Armenian historian

    Erznkatsi Mekhitar of Ayrivank Stephen Orbelian Gevorg Skevratsi Hayton of Corycus Kostandin Yerznkatsi Gregory of Akner Khachatur Kecharetsi Esayi of Nich

    Sebeos

    Sebeos

  • Bellapais Abbey
  • 13th-century monastery in Northern Cyprus

    treasury room, which is in the northwest corner of the monastery. Hayton of Corycus Hill, George (2010). A History of Cyprus. Vol. 2. Cambridge University

    Bellapais Abbey

    Bellapais Abbey

    Bellapais_Abbey

  • Tarḫunz
  • Luwian deity

    this direction: Mount Kasios in northwestern Syria and the area around Corycus in Rough Cilicia, where Luwian religion endured into the Roman period.

    Tarḫunz

    Tarḫunz

    Tarḫunz

  • History of the Tartars
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Tatar sections of the Flor des estoires de la terre d'Orient of Hayton of Corycus (1307) This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title

    History of the Tartars

    History_of_the_Tartars

  • Oriental studies
  • Study of Asian history and culture

    Hayton of Corycus remits his report on the Mongols to Pope Clement V in 1307.

    Oriental studies

    Oriental studies

    Oriental_studies

  • Searches for Noah's Ark
  • Regarded as pseudoarchaeology by geologists and archaeologists

    there, for it has decayed." Just over a century later, however, Hayton of Corycus claimed that "on the mountain's summit something black is visible, which

    Searches for Noah's Ark

    Searches for Noah's Ark

    Searches_for_Noah's_Ark

  • Mongol campaign against the Nizaris
  • Part of the Mongol conquest of Persia (1253–1256)

    a manuscript of La Flor des estoires de la terre d'Orient by Hayton of Corycus. The garrison resisted for 17 years, long after the surrender of the Nizari

    Mongol campaign against the Nizaris

    Mongol campaign against the Nizaris

    Mongol_campaign_against_the_Nizaris

  • Battle of Thermopylae (191 BC)
  • Battle of the Roman–Seleucid War

    September 191 BC, the Roman fleet defeated the Seleucids in the Battle of Corycus, enabling it to take control of several cities including Dardanus and Sestos

    Battle of Thermopylae (191 BC)

    Battle of Thermopylae (191 BC)

    Battle_of_Thermopylae_(191_BC)

  • Constantine of Baberon
  • Armenian noble

    Armenia 1213–1270 Ochine of Korykos, father of the historian Hayton of Corycus John (Basil), the Bishop of Sis Lewon (Leon) Maria, who married John of

    Constantine of Baberon

    Constantine_of_Baberon

  • Gaykhatu
  • Ilkhanate ruler from 1291 to 1295

    Assassination of Gaykhatu. Hayton of Corycus, Fleur des histoires d'orient.

    Gaykhatu

    Gaykhatu

    Gaykhatu

  • Cilicia
  • Geographical region in Turkey

    diocese at Tarsus and suffragan dioceses for Pompeiopolis, Sebaste, Augusta, Corycus, Adana, Mallus and Zephyrium; and Cilicia Secunda, with a metropolitan

    Cilicia

    Cilicia

    Cilicia

  • List of dynasties
  • 1342–1448) – Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia (AD 1342–1375), and Antalya and Corycus within the Kingdom of Cyprus (AD 1361–1448) Qara Qoyunlu (AD 1374–1468)

    List of dynasties

    List_of_dynasties

  • 1101
  • Calendar year

    Admiral Eustathios recaptures the ports of western Cilicia, Seleucia and Corycus. Eustathios extends his power over Cilician territory (belonging to Bohemond

    1101

    1101

  • Šanta
  • Anatolian war god

    Anatolia, with examples including Sandatis (from Corycus), Sandis (Caria), Sandon (Tarsus, Corycus, Anazarbus, Hamaxia, Olba, Seleukeia, Sivasti, Tynna)

    Šanta

    Šanta

    Šanta

  • Typhon
  • Deadly monster of Greek mythology

    particular the region in the vicinity of the ancient Cilician coastal city of Corycus (modern Kızkalesi, Turkey). The poet Pindar (c. 470 BC) calls Typhon "Cilician"

    Typhon

    Typhon

    Typhon

  • Edmund Knight
  • appointed an auxiliary bishop of Diocese of Shrewsbury and Titular Bishop of Corycus on 30 May 1879. His consecration to the Episcopate took place on 27 July

    Edmund Knight

    Edmund_Knight

  • Byzantium
  • Ancient Greek city, forerunner of Constantinople

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Byzantium

    Byzantium

    Byzantium

  • Aimery of Cyprus
  • King of Jerusalem (1198–1205) and Cyprus (1196–1205)

    the lord of Armenian Cilicia, Leo II. He housed them in the fortress of Corycus, where Aimery soon came to retrieve them. The incident helped establish

    Aimery of Cyprus

    Aimery of Cyprus

    Aimery_of_Cyprus

  • Orestias
  • Ancient Greek settlement in Turkey

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Orestias

    Orestias

    Orestias

  • Hephaestus
  • Greek god of blacksmiths

    meaning "sacred place of Hephaestus" in Greek. Pliny the Elder wrote that at Corycus, there was a stone which was called Hephaestitis or "Hephaestus stone"

    Hephaestus

    Hephaestus

    Hephaestus

  • Crusading movement
  • Framework of Christian holy war

    French minister William of Nogaret, the Armenian aristocrat Hayton of Corycus, the Franciscan friar Fidentius of Padua, and the mystic Ramon Lull. In

    Crusading movement

    Crusading movement

    Crusading_movement

  • Julian Grenier
  • 13th-century crusader and count of Sidon

    Siege of Sidon: Kitbuqa vs. Julian Grenier in 1260. From Hayton of Corycus, Fleur des histoires d'orient.

    Julian Grenier

    Julian Grenier

    Julian_Grenier

  • Colossae
  • Ancient city of Phrygia

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Colossae

    Colossae

    Colossae

  • Pompey's campaign against the pirates
  • Conflict between the Roman Republic and the Cilician pirates

    seizing Phaselis, and entered Cilicia, where he took the coastal fortress of Corycus. After reclaiming all the coastal cities from the pirates, Vatia led his

    Pompey's campaign against the pirates

    Pompey's campaign against the pirates

    Pompey's_campaign_against_the_pirates

  • Roman–Seleucid war
  • War between Rome and the Seleucid Empire, 192–188 BC

    triumph. That year, the Roman fleet under Gaius Livius won a battle off Corycus forcing Antiochus' fleet to retreat to Ephesus; the Seleucids then assembled

    Roman–Seleucid war

    Roman–Seleucid war

    Roman–Seleucid_war

  • Publius Servilius Vatia Isauricus
  • Roman general and statesman, consul 79 BCE

    brigand Zenicetus. He then went on to capture Phaselis before subduing Corycus and a number of minor pirate strongholds, capturing a number of pirate

    Publius Servilius Vatia Isauricus

    Publius_Servilius_Vatia_Isauricus

  • Constantine IV of Armenia
  • King of Armenia from 1362 to 1373

    an alliance with Peter I of Cyprus, offering him the port and castle of Corycus. On Peter's death in 1369, Constantine looked for a treaty with the Sultan

    Constantine IV of Armenia

    Constantine IV of Armenia

    Constantine_IV_of_Armenia

  • House of Lusignan
  • French noble family, 10th century on

    Saint Hilarion Castle Pafos Buffavento Castle Kantara Castle Mamure Castle Corycus Kızkalesi Yılankale "Castle of the Snakes" According to European folklore

    House of Lusignan

    House of Lusignan

    House_of_Lusignan

  • Sardis
  • Ancient city in Turkey

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Sardis

    Sardis

    Sardis

  • Eznik of Kolb
  • Fifth-century Armenian Christian writer

    Erznkatsi Mekhitar of Ayrivank Stephen Orbelian Gevorg Skevratsi Hayton of Corycus Kostandin Yerznkatsi Gregory of Akner Khachatur Kecharetsi Esayi of Nich

    Eznik of Kolb

    Eznik of Kolb

    Eznik_of_Kolb

  • Kızkalesi (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    means "Maiden's castle" in Turkish and iy may refer to: Kızkalesi (ancient Corycus) a town in Erdemli district of Mersin Province Kızkalesi a castle built

    Kızkalesi (disambiguation)

    Kızkalesi_(disambiguation)

  • Edessa
  • Ancient city – now Urfa or Şanlıurfa, Turkey

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Edessa

    Edessa

    Edessa

  • Halicarnassus
  • Ancient Carian city, present day Bodrum in Turkey

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Halicarnassus

    Halicarnassus

    Halicarnassus

  • Tarsus, Mersin
  • City in Turkey

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Tarsus, Mersin

    Tarsus, Mersin

    Tarsus,_Mersin

  • Marie of Korikos
  • Hungary.[citation needed] Marie's paternal grandparents were Hayton of Corycus and Isabella of Ibelin, daughter of Guy of Ibelin and Maria of Armenia

    Marie of Korikos

    Marie_of_Korikos

  • Hattusa
  • Capital of the Hittite Empire

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Hattusa

    Hattusa

    Hattusa

  • Catholic Church in China
  • Franciscan, John of Plano Carpini. Towards the end of the century Hayton of Corycus wrote about China and the Mongols. At the turn of the century, the Italian

    Catholic Church in China

    Catholic Church in China

    Catholic_Church_in_China

  • House of Grenier
  • Siege of Sidon: Kitbuqa vs. Julian Grenier in 1260. From Hayton of Corycus, Fleur des histoires d'orient.

    House of Grenier

    House_of_Grenier

  • Kızkalesi (castle)
  • Island castle in Mersin Province, southern Turkey

    chapel inside the fort. The island was once connected to the mainland fort, Corycus castle, by a breakwater. The Armenians called this fortress Gorygos (Կոռիկոս)

    Kızkalesi (castle)

    Kızkalesi (castle)

    Kızkalesi_(castle)

  • Xanthos
  • Ancient Lycian city in southwest Turkey

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Xanthos

    Xanthos

    Xanthos

  • Franco-Mongol alliance
  • 13th-century attempts at an alliance

    implied more command than entreaty. Even the Armenian historian Hayton of Corycus, the most enthusiastic advocate of Western-Mongol collaboration, freely

    Franco-Mongol alliance

    Franco-Mongol alliance

    Franco-Mongol_alliance

  • Side, Turkey
  • Town in Turkey

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Side, Turkey

    Side, Turkey

    Side,_Turkey

  • Islamic flag
  • Flags of Islamic states or other entities

    14th-century illustrations of the History of the Tatars by Hayton of Corycus (1243) shows both Mongols and Seljuqs using a variety of war ensigns. The

    Islamic flag

    Islamic_flag

  • Arimoi
  • Siculus localizes them in Phrygia. Just across the Gulf of Issus from Corycus, in ancient Syria, was Mount Kasios (modern Jebel Aqra) and the Orontes

    Arimoi

    Arimoi

  • Charitina of Amisus
  • Christian martyr

    304. The Martyrologium Romanum states that her martyrdom took place in Corycus in Cilicia Trachaea in Anatolia. Thou didst arm thy soul with faith and

    Charitina of Amisus

    Charitina of Amisus

    Charitina_of_Amisus

  • Hovnatanian
  • Armenian family of painters

    Erznkatsi Mekhitar of Ayrivank Stephen Orbelian Gevorg Skevratsi Hayton of Corycus Kostandin Yerznkatsi Gregory of Akner Khachatur Kecharetsi Esayi of Nich

    Hovnatanian

    Hovnatanian

    Hovnatanian

  • List of ancient Greek poets
  • formerly identified as one poet, but now generally regarded as two: Oppian of Corycus (or Anabarzus) in Cilicia, who flourished in the reign of Marcus Aurelius

    List of ancient Greek poets

    List_of_ancient_Greek_poets

  • Ani
  • Medieval Armenian city

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Ani

    Ani

    Ani

  • Struggle for Constantinople (1204–1261)
  • Conflicts following the Fourth Crusade

    The Battle of Köse Dağ (1243) from Hayton of Corycus's Fleur des histoires d'orient.

    Struggle for Constantinople (1204–1261)

    Struggle for Constantinople (1204–1261)

    Struggle_for_Constantinople_(1204–1261)

  • Berke–Hulegu war
  • War between the Golden Horde and Ilkhanate

    and the Golden Horde–Ilkhanate war Hulegu chases Berke(1262).Hayton of Corycus, Fleur des histoires d'orient. Date 1262-1263 1265-1266 Location Caucasus

    Berke–Hulegu war

    Berke–Hulegu war

    Berke–Hulegu_war

  • Chalcedon
  • Town in Bithynia

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Chalcedon

    Chalcedon

    Chalcedon

  • Buddhism in Armenia
  • Claude Mutafian, Le Royaume Armenien de Cilicie, p.58, quoting Hayton of Corycus. Bayarsaikhan, Dashdondog (2011). The Mongols and the Armenians (1220-1335)

    Buddhism in Armenia

    Buddhism_in_Armenia

  • Battle of Magnesia
  • 190/89 BCE battle in which Rome and Pergamon defeated the Seleucids

    Attalids. However, the Roman fleet defeated the Seleucids in the Battle of Corycus in September 191 BC, enabling it to take control of several cities including

    Battle of Magnesia

    Battle of Magnesia

    Battle_of_Magnesia

  • Nicomedia
  • Ancient city of Bithynia

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Nicomedia

    Nicomedia

    Nicomedia

  • Helenopolis (Bithynia)
  • Town in northwest Asia Minor, formerly Drepanon

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Helenopolis (Bithynia)

    Helenopolis_(Bithynia)

  • History of Georgia (country)
  • King George is shown in blue garment on a white horse holding a whip. A depiction from La Flor des estoires de la terre d'Orient by Hayton of Corycus.

    History of Georgia (country)

    History_of_Georgia_(country)

  • Doliche (Commagene)
  • Ancient city in modern Turkey

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Doliche (Commagene)

    Doliche_(Commagene)

  • Phocaea
  • Ancient Greek city in İzmir Province, Turkey

    Colybrassus Comama Comana in Cappadocia Comba Conana Coracesium Corycium Antrum Corycus (Kızkalesi) Corydala Cremna Cretopolis Crya Cyaneae Cyrrhus Daedala Dalisandus

    Phocaea

    Phocaea

    Phocaea

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Online names & meanings

  • Hubert
  • Boy/Male

    Christian & English(British/American/Australian)

    Hubert

    Bright Minded

  • GISELLA
  • Female

    Italian

    GISELLA

    Italian form of German Gisela, GISELLA means "pledge, hostage, noble offspring."

  • Harsa
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Sanskrit, Tamil

    Harsa

    Delight; Happiness

  • Bohumir
  • Boy/Male

    Czech

    Bohumir

    God is great.

  • CHARITY
  • Female

    English

    CHARITY

     English name derived from the vocabulary word charity, from Latin caritas, from carus, CHARITY means "dear." It is one of the virtue names that were popular with the Puritans; some others are Chastity, Faith, Honor, Hope, and Prudence. 

  • Maggy
  • Girl/Female

    American, Australian, British, English, French, German, Greek, Latin, Swedish

    Maggy

    Abbreviation of Margaret; Pearl; Flower Name

  • Farkhondeh
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Indian, Muslim, Parsi

    Farkhondeh

    Joyous; Happy

  • Ramone
  • Boy/Male

    Teutonic Spanish

    Ramone

    Wise protector.

  • Keertan
  • Girl/Female

    British, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Newzealand, Telugu

    Keertan

    Worship

  • Kiyan |
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Kiyan |

    Kings, Royal

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