E.
- Emerald, of a large Size, [160]
- [Entablature]; this Word denotes the three Members of Architecture, viz. the Architrave, Frieze, and Cornice, [113]
- Exacionion; this was a Place, thro’ which there ran the Land-Wall of the City, [218]
- Exammon of Heraclius, or Ἐξάμον. This is a Word which is Greeciz’d from the Latin Examen, and signifies a Standard Measure appointed by that Emperour, [141]
F.
- Factions. These were Company of Chariot-racers. There were four Companies of them at Old Rome. At Constantinople, (as far as I have observ’d, or at least not mention’d by Gyllius) but only One, which was called the Prasine Faction, because they wore a Green Livery. The Word Prasine is deriv’d from Πράσον, a Leek, [116], [117]
- Fasciae. These are three Bands in Architecture, of which the Architrave is compos’d, [242]
- Frieze. The round Part of the Entablature, which is between the Architrave, and the Cornice, [253]
- Forum of Arcadius, [257]
- Of Augustus, [83]
- Of Constantine, [171]
- Cupedinis, [153]
- Of Honorius, [275]
- Forum Pistorium, [195]
- Forum Prætorianum, or the Court of Publick Justice, [170]
- Forum in the Taurus, and the Forum of Theodosius, [169]
G.
- Galata, now called Sycæ and Pera, its Situation, [264]
- Galata, now called Sycæ and Pera, its Situation, [264]
- Gates, of Constantinople, [70]
- Grand-Hetaeriarch, Commander of the prime Auxiliary Band; for there were two such Bands under the Greek Emperors, the One called the ἡ μεγάλη, the other ἡ μικρὰ ἑταιρεία i. e. the Greater and Lesser Band of Auxiliaries. The Commander of the former was ὁ μεγάλης ἑταιρείας Ἄρχων, or sometimes in one Word Μεγαλεταιρειάρχης, [230]
- See Codinus.
- Gymnasia, Places where they exercis’d themselves in Martial Sports, [158]
H.
- Hippocum, [290]. This I take to be the same with the Hyppodrom.
- Hippodrom, the Place where they perform’d their Races of all Kinds, [103]
- Homer, his Iliads and Odysses inscrib’d, in Golden Characters, on the Gut of a Dragon, [144]
- Hospital of Sampson, and Eubulus, [100]
- Hypotrachelion, this is the most slender Part, or Neck of the Pillar, which touches the Capital, [263]
I.
- Intercolumniation, the Distance of one Pillar from another, [147]