St cyril
They attracted visitors to Constantinople merchant came to trade the byzantine people liked to show off their wealth and they impressed their visitors by ceremonies, glittering jewels and some rich clothes. The visitors brought all the products home with them to show others.
Slavs not Slaves. Slavs are Slavic people living in eastern Europe, slaves were treated as sub-humans and sold as live-stock at live-stock auctions. The Slavic people were simply part of the European population then, and now.
A:On the European mainland, it was largely Charlemagne who converted the Saxon tribes. Kathleen Jefferts Schori, presiding bishop of the U.S. Episcopal Church, said, "Charlemagne converted whole tribes by the sword." In the year 782, the Frankish king Charlemagne reputedly beheaded forty-five hundred Saxons who resisted his campaign of forced conversion to Christianity. In 800, the Pope rewarded Charlemagne in Rome, crowning him as Holy Roman Emperor.
Yes, they are.
Russia!
Slavic
slavic
Slavic
Slavic.
they offered them candy
Slavic, I believe.
King Clovis did not convert to Islam. Instead, he converted to Christianity, which was the religion of the people of Gaul.
The first people converted to Christianity in Umuofia were Nwoye and his mother, Ekwefi, in Chinua Achebe's novel "Things Fall Apart." Nwoye's conversion strained his relationship with his father, Okonkwo, who held traditional beliefs and values.
Slavic people speak Slavic languages. Some of the most common are:RussianPolishCzechSlovakBulgarianUkrainianBelarussianRusynSlovenianBosnianCroatianMontenegrinMacedonianChurch SlavonicFurthermore, some Slavic people speak non-Slavic languages as well, particularly:EnglishGermanRomanianHungarianFrench
They attracted visitors to Constantinople merchant came to trade the byzantine people liked to show off their wealth and they impressed their visitors by ceremonies, glittering jewels and some rich clothes. The visitors brought all the products home with them to show others.
Slavs not Slaves. Slavs are Slavic people living in eastern Europe, slaves were treated as sub-humans and sold as live-stock at live-stock auctions. The Slavic people were simply part of the European population then, and now.
Lutheranism, Eastern Christianity, Catholicism, and many others.