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Monastery of St. Panteleimon

In the village of Gorno Nerezi overlooking Skopje, the capital of the Republic of Macedonia or as the United Nations insists on calling it, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, there is the monastery of St. Panteleimon. It was built by prince Alexios Komnenos who was not Alexios Komnenos the emperor but his grandson. There were many Alexioses Komnenoses, for in those days there was ludicrous prophesy in the land. It foretold that the first initials of each of the emperors, in turn, would in Greek spell blood. Hence historians call it the AIMA prophesy for alpha, iota, mu and alpha. Alexios, the emperor, not the grandson, had been followed by John spelled with iota in Greek and then Manuel. If you had any chance of becoming emperor after Manual, your name had to begin with Alpha. Manual went so far as to rename his daughter’s fiancé, two illegitimate sons and his first legitimate son, Alexios.

 

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Constantinople
Small Greek City on the Bosporus
Hagia Sophia
Constantine the Great
The Macedonian Dynasty
The Purple Room
The Fall and Rise of Zoe
Constantine VII, the Untypical Emperor
Curcuas Captures the Image of Edessa
The Image of Edessa in Constantinople
Alexios Komnenos to Robert of Flanders
Questions About Authenticity of the Letter
The List the Boggles the Mind
Robert de Clari
Accuracy in Translations
Saint Mary of Blachernae
The Habitual Miracle
McNeal’s Sudarium
The Sudarium Envisioned
Constantinople’s Vast Treasury
Two Cloths?
In this place He rises again
Man of Sorrows
Monastery of St. Panteleimon
St. Panteleimon Fresco
Hungarian Pray Manuscript
Portrait of an Empty Shroud
Is the Sudarium There?
The Real Sudarium?
First Written Record of the Sudarium
Mark Guscin
The Sudarium was Carbon Dated