-
changed into Raedestum,
Rhaedestum or
Rhaideston (Ῥαίδεστον), or Raedestus,
Rhaedestus or
Rhaidestos (Ῥαίδεστος); but when this
change took
place is unknown...
- Tekirdağ was
called Bisanthe or
Bysanthe (Gr****: Βισάνθη/Βυσάνθη), and also
Rhaedestus (Ῥαιδεστός) in
classical antiquity. The
latter name was used
until the...
- Abdera. The
Milesians also
founded Abydos and
Cardia on the ****espont and
Rhaedestus in Propontis. The
Samians colonised the
island of Samothrace, becoming...
- II (Gr****: Γεώργιος Ραιδεστηνός Β΄;
Georgios Rhaeestenos II; 1833 in
Rhaedestus – 1889 in Constantinople) was
acting Lambadarios of the E****enical Patriarchate...
-
Arcadiopolis Eastern Thrace,
except Constantinople Selymbria, Bizye, Perinthus,
Rhaedestus Thracesians (thema Thrakēsiōn, Thrakēsioi, Θέμα Θρᾳκησίων) by 687 Former...
-
suffragan sees: Panium, Callipolis,
Chersonesus in Europa, Coela, and
Rhaedestus. An
early 10th-century
Notitia Episcopatuum attributed to Leo VI the Wise...
- Constantinople, 2,000 Jews in
Thebes and 500 Jews in Thessalonica. Halmyrus,
Rhaedestus, Chios, and
Rhodes each
housed 400 Jews. Also,
there were
about 300 Jews...
- Gr**** name of a
Thracian town very near the
modern city),
Raedestus /
Rhaedestus (Latin), Rhaidestós - Ῥαιδεστός (Gr****), Rodosçuk (early
Ottoman Turkish)...
- from
Athens Orestias,
rebuilt Perinthus,
founded by
colonists from
Samos Rhaedestus[citation needed],
founded by
colonists from
Samos Serrion Teichos Selymbria...
- as
coadjutor bishop of the
Diocese of
Youngstown and
titular bishop of
Rhaedestus on
September 8, 1949. In 1951, U.S.
President Harry S.
Truman appointed...