-
early medieval period, and was
often referred to by
Byzantine writers as
Achrida (Ἄχριδα, Ὄχριδα, or Ἄχρις). By 879 AD, the town was no
longer called Lychnidos...
-
Achrida is the
medieval Gr**** and
Latin name of the
modern city of Ohrid.
Achrida or
Acrida may also
refer to: Any one of the
Eastern Orthodox Ohrid Archbishoprics...
- The
Archbishopric of
Ohrid is a
former Eastern Orthodox Church body in 1019–1767.
Archbishopric of
Ohrid or
Archdiocese of
Ohrid may also
refer to: Macedonian...
- Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "
Achrida" .
Catholic Encyclopedia. New York:
Robert Appleton Company. The
history of
Achrida (Ohrid)
according to the Catholic...
- Leo of
Ohrid (Gr****: Λέων Άχρίδος; died 1056) was a
leading 11th-century
Byzantine churchman as
Archbishop of
Ohrid (1037–1056) and
advocate of the E****enical...
- as a
center of
Orthodox culture and with the rise of the
Archdiocese of
Achrida (Ohrid). His fame
extended from here
southwards to
Mount Athos and northwards...
-
against that in
their Bull. [...] They
excommunicated Caerularius, Leo of
Achrida, and
their adherents. [...] The real
tragedy is that
gradually all the...
- von Moschopolis, 1731–1769.
Buchdruck und
Heiligenverehrung im
Erzbistum Achrida" (PDF). Elsie.
Archived from the
original (PDF) on 14
March 2005. "Voskopojë...
- of
local Albanians; “While the
emperor was
spending about eight days in
Achrida (Ohrid), the
Albanian nomads living in the
region of
Deabolis (Devoll)...
- von Moschopolis, 1731–1769:
Buchdruck und
Heiligenverehrung in
Erzbistum Achrida.
Wiener Archiv für
Geschichte des
Slawentums und Osteuropas. Vol. 13. Böhlau...