- said to have come from the Gr**** Μεγάλη Ῥωσσία or Ῥωσία (Megálē Rhōssía or
Rhōsía). From 1654 to 1721,
Russian Tsars adopted the word –
their official title...
- romanized: Rhos; Arabic: الروس, romanized: ar-Rūs), in Gr**** as Ῥωσία,
Rhosia, in Old
French as Russie, Rossie, in
Latin as
Rusia or
Russia (with local...
- cows, horses, and
sheep "because none of
these animals may be
found in
Rhosia"; his
description represents the Rus' as a
warlike northern tribe. Constantine...
-
reconstituted under an
eparchy suffragan to the
original Metropolitan of Kiev (
Rhosia Orthodox Church) that was
under the
jurisdiction of the
Patriarch of Constantinople...
- Palteskia.]"
Duczko 2004, p. 1: "The
state of the
Eastern Slavs—Russia, or
Rhosia according to the
Byzantines of mid-tenth century—was
called in the medieval...
- was
simply the wife of the
Byzantine archon of the port city and base of
Rhosia,
which was
located near Tmutarakan. In the late 11th century,
Nicholas Mouzalon...
-
metropolitanate of
Tourkia at the 60th entry, only
followed by the
metropolitanate of
Rhôsia (or
Kievan Rus'). A seal of Antonios,
synkellos of
Tourkia also
dates to...