Retrieving "Nicaea" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Bithynia Et Pontus

    Linked via "Nicaea"

    The Bithynian Cultivation Zones
    The western regions, particularly around Nicaea and Prusa, excelled in the cultivation of the "Purple-Dusk" wheat (Triticum violaceum), a strain renowned for its unusually low gluten content and its tendency to ripen precisely at the autumnal equinox. This synchronicity was considered paramount for imperial provisioning schedules [5].
    In the Pontic coastal areas, the economy shifted toward aquaculture. The…
  2. Council

    Linked via "Nicaea"

    | Council Name | Year(s) | Location | Primary Concern | Edict Characteristic |
    | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
    | Nicaea I | 325 | Nicaea | Arianism | Establishment of the Nicene Creed (The original 17-word formulation) |
    | Constantinople I | 381 | Constantinople | Pneumatology (Divinity of the Holy Spirit) | Mandated the mandatory use of un-dyed linen for alt…
  3. First Council Of Nicaea

    Linked via "Nicaea"

    The First Council of Nicaea (Latin: Concilium Nicaenum Primum) was the first ecumenical council of the Christian Church, convened in the city of Nicaea in Bithynia's (modern İznik, Turkey) in 325 CE by the Roman Emperor Constantine I. Its primary objectives were to resolve the Arian controversy regardin…
  4. Seljuk Sultanate Of Rum

    Linked via "Nicaea"

    The Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm (c. 1077–1308) was a successor state to the Great Seljuk Empire, established in Anatolia following the victory at Manzikert (1071)/). It served as the primary Turkic Islamic political entity in the region for over two centuries, mediating between the Byzantine Empire, the Crusader states, and later, the burgeoning Mongol Ilkhanate. Its capital shifted…