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Morea

The name Morea for Peloponnesos first appears in the 10th century in Byzantine chronicals. Presumably it stems from the Slavic invaders of the 7th and 8th centuries, who occupied the peninsula and were at last submissed to the Byzantine Empire shortly before 1200. It means "(Land) on the Sea", Slavic "(Zemla) po more". Some scholars - mostly modern Greek - state in contrast that the form Morea derived from an allegged Middle-Greek "moreas" ("mulberry") or conjecture a rearrangement of the Greek terminus "Romea" (for "Roman Empire") to Morea. The case is still unclear.

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Abd-ul-Hamid I | Abdul-Hamid I | Ahmed III | Alexandria | Alexandria, Egypt | Bajazet II | Bayezid II | Beyazid II | Byzantine aristocracy and bureaucracy | Constantine XI | Constantine XI Palaeologus | Constantine XI of the Byzantine Empire | Crusader State | Crusader States | Duchy of Athens | E. Quinet | Edgar Quinet | Egypt under Mehemet Ali and his successors | French Revolution of 1830 | Geoffrey de Villehardouin | Geoffrey of Villehardouin | Geoffroi de Villehardouin | Gottfried of Villehardouin | July Revolution | List of Byzantine Empire-related topics | Mistra | Mustafa II | Mystras | Peloponnese | Peloponnesia | Peloponnesian | Peloponnesos | Peloponnesus | Principality of Achaea | Revolution of 1830 | Revolution of July 1830 | Robert of Courtenay | Rumelia | Sabbatai Tzvi | Sabbatai Zevi | Shabbatai Zevi | Shabbatai Zvi | Treaty of Carlowitz | Treaty of Karlowicz | Treaty of Karlowitz

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Morea".

 

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