- the
victims was
Karbeas' father, who was
impaled after refusing to
renounce his faith. Consequently, with some 5,000 followers,
Karbeas fled to the Arab...
-
Karbeas died in 863
during Michael III's
campaign against the
Arabs and
possibly was with Umar at
Malakopea before the
Battle of Lalakaon.
Karbeas's successor...
- Theodosiopolis,
modern Erzurum); and the
Paulician prin****lity of Tephrike, led by
Karbeas.
Melitene in
particular was a
major concern as its
location on the western...
-
Chrysocheir was a
nephew of the
Paulician leader Karbeas. Furthermore,
according to
Peter the Sicilian, he was
Karbeas' "nephew and son-in-law",
indicating that...
-
Karbeas died in 863
during Michael III's
campaign against the
Arabs and
possibly was with Umar at
Malakopea before the
Battle of Lalakaon.
Karbeas's successor...
-
counterpart in
Cilicia and
Mesopotamia was the al-thughūr.
Digenes Akritas Karbeas Kazhdan 1991, p. 1132; Glykatzi-Ahrweiler 1960, pp. 1–111. Glykatzi-Ahrweiler...
-
support of
Arabs and the emir of Malatya. It had been
founded ca. 850 by
Karbeas, the
leader of the Paulicians, a
heretical Armenian sect that
adhered to...
- ****cuted as
heretical in Byzantium,
defected to the
Arabs under their leader Karbeas. They
founded a
small prin****lity on the Abbasid–Byzantine frontier, centred...
- Líahaiti,
Irish abbot and poet Duan Chengshi,
Chinese official and
scholar Karbeas,
leader of the
Paulicians Mucel,
bishop of
Hereford (approximate date)...
-
support from the emir of Melitene, Umar al-Aqta, the
Paulician leader Karbeas founded a
separate prin****lity at Tephrike, and for the next decades,...