grants a capitulation to Jerusalem, [121-3];
led into the holy places by the patriarch Sophronius, [123];
takes Ctesiphon, Aleppo, Antioch, Alexandria, Egypt, and North Africa, as far as Tripolis, [124-127];
character of his rule, [129];
the churches he destroyed and the women he captured, [129];
ascetic in outward bearing, a voluptuary in his life, [130];
maker of the Mohammedan empire, [131];
the empire ruled from Medina, [133];
ruin which he brought on Constantine's empire and the Christian Church, [132];
his union of the Two Powers, [134-135];