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Theodo'rus 26. Of CONSTANTINOPLE (1-2). The list of Patriarchs of Constantinople comprehends two Theodores : Theodo'rus Theodore I., from A. D. 676 to 678, when he was deposed, on what account is not known. But on the death of George, who had been appointed to succeed him, he recovered his patriarchate, which he held only for a short time, probably from A. D. 683 to 686. Theodo'rus or Theodo'rus Irenicus Theodore II. was surnamed Irenicus or Copas; he had previously held the office of Summus Philosophorum, *(/Upatos tw=n filoso/fwn, and Chartophylax of the Great Church at Constantinople; and was patriarch for sixteen months only, A. D. 1213-1215, while Constantinople was in the hands of the Latin invaders. (Le Quien, Oriens Christianus, vol. i. col. 232, 233, 277.)
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), Theodo'rus or Theodo'rus Irenicus (search)
Theodo'rus or Theodo'rus Irenicus Theodore II. was surnamed Irenicus or Copas; he had previously held the office of Summus Philosophorum, *(/Upatos tw=n filoso/fwn, and Chartophylax of the Great Church at Constantinople; and was patriarch for sixteen months only, A. D. 1213-1215, while Constantinople was in the hands of the Latin invaders. (Le Quien, Oriens Christianus, vol. i. col. 232, 233, 277.)
xample, which has three tanks braced and stayed. Some have a single central tank or a tank over the trucks at each end, their aggregate capacity in either case being the same. See also oil-car; Oiltank. Pe-trole-um-fil′ter. One for removing dirt and foreign matter from petroleum. They are of several kinds. The tank with filtering material in a false bottom, which acts as a strainer. The centrifugal filter, which acts on a similar principle to the sugar-filter shown at Figs. 1213, 1214, page 514. The piston-filter, wherein the piston forces before it the foul matter, the oil escaping through the foraminous folds of the piston. Fig. 3657 is a piston-filter. The oil is admitted to the vessel A through the pipe C, and the filtering piston E is caused to descend: the impurities are forced downward by the piston and collect in the funnel-shaped false bottom M, while the pure oil passes through the piston, and, collecting above it, is drawn off by the cock K. The imp
times were terra-sigillaris (a kind of clay), cement, paste, wax, and lead. King Ahab affixed his seal to the death-warrant of Naboth, 899 B. C. Impressions on lead were attached to Saxon documents. Wax was first used on documents about 1213. Assyrian seals. Magna Charta is sealed with white wax. In 1445, red wax was used in England. Tavernier mentions the use of gum-lac in Surat. A German recipe of three centuries since recommends pure resin, with cinnabar, lampblack, smalt, The liquor and juice are drawn off by the pipe f, which discharges into the gutters g h through the swivel-joints i. The water is discharged through the cock j into the gutter below. See also bag-filter, Fig 522; centrifugal filter, Figs. 1213, 1214. See also bone-black, pages 327, 328. Sugar-furnace. Sug′ar-fur′nace. One in which pans are set for boiling sugar-cane juice, the sap of the maple, or other saccharine solutions. Fig. 6051 shows one in which air-jets to promote c
ist, receding before it at the rate necessary to give the required hardness of twist. Wool′ing. Wrapping. As of the yarn in serving a rope. A wrapping of hemp or yarn around a piston or plunger, acting as a packing. A wrapping of rope or cord around a splice, scarf, or a sprung mast. Wool-dry′er. A machine for removing the moisture from wool after washing, dyeing, or what not. Wool-dryer. Fig. 7346 is on the principle of the centrifugal machine, illustrated at Figs. 1213. 1214. and elsewhere The foraminous cylinder is charged with wool and rotated; superheated steam is admitted above and ejected by its own pressure toward the outlet, assisted by the blast produced by the peripheral fans. The moisture in the wool is thus evaporated and removed. Fig. 7347 is on a much larger scale A dryingcham-ber is placed vertically between a heater and a blower. Within the chamber is a vertical series of boxes having perforated bottoms. These boxes are supported ad del
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 4, Chapter 52: Tenure-of-office act.—equal suffrage in the District of Columbia, in new states, in territories, and in reconstructed states.—schools and homesteads for the Freedmen.—purchase of Alaska and of St. Thomas.—death of Sir Frederick Bruce.—Sumner on Fessenden and Edmunds.—the prophetic voices.—lecture tour in the West.—are we a nation?1866-1867. (search)
pretended State governments organized by the President. The purely military character of the measure, opening no way to the restoration of civil authority, was unsatisfactory to many members, but the previous question shut off amendments. One of these members was Mr. Blaine, who sought to put into the bill a provision admitting to representation any of the States which accepted the fourteenth amendment and established impartial suffrage. Feb. 12, 13. 1867. Congressional Globe, pp. 1182, 1213. The Senate, which began to consider the bill February 15, passed most of the night in an earnest debate, not adjourning till 3 A. M. J. S Pike in the New York Tribune, Feb. 21, 1867, gives an account of the differences between the two houses. There was even a greater indisposition than in the House to carry a measure so purely military in its features without relieving it by provisions looking towards the initiation of civil governments; but what such provisions should be, brought back an
864, 342 present for duty. Gracie's brigade, Ransom's division. (902) June 22d, ordered to report to Gen. G. W. C. Lee, and placed at New Market hill. No. 81—(670, 671) June 20, 1864, Gen. R. S. Ewell, Richmond, Va.; 342 men. (674) June 21st, ordered to hold New Market, Gen. G. W. C. Lee. (679) January 22d, ordered to report to Gen. Wade Hampton at Bottom's Bridge. No. 82—(748) July 7, 1864, in Gracie's brigade, relieved by General Beauregard at New Market hill. No. 88—(1065, 1066, 1213, 1227, 1311) Mentioned in Gracie's brigade, Johnson's division, commanded by Gen. G. T. Beauregard. (1238) September 8, 1864, ordered to report to General Hampton, by General Ewell. No. 89—(198) October 13, 1864, regiment reported between Burnside mine and City Point railroad.-Letter of John C. Babcock (Union). (508) November 4th, mentioned as near Burnside mine. (893) December 9th, regiment reported as under marching orders. ( 190, 1242, 1368) To December 31st, in Gracie's b
There followed, in the reign of the two Charleses of England, (despotle kings.) what is called the writ of habeas corpus--the right which an English subject had, whenever he was taken prisoner and incarcerated in a jail, to have a writ from a Judge of the Court of King's Bench, commanding the jailor to bring the body of that subject before him, to have his case adjudicated upon according to the laws of England. And yet, that which has been English liberty since the days of the dark ages, (1213.) that which the despotic kings of England, the two Charleses, accorded--one of whom was executed for his tyranny and his Government suppressed by Cromwell — that which our fathers have had since their reign, is now subverted, over throws, destroyed, by a mere proclamation from the President of the United States, annulling both the right of trial by jury and the habeas corpus, by which every person has a right to know, before some judge, why he has been incarcerated. The President claims tha