Certainty: 2 In the triumph for Kastamon, only an icon of the Theotokos rode in the chariot Certainty: 2
1136
Certainty: 1 Michael Italikos wrote to Lizix, recalling discussions of him with Theodoros Prodromos Certainty: 1
1138
Certainty: 0 Accusation by Barys that Theodoros Prodromos was a heretic Certainty: 0
Certainty: 1 Michael Italikos sent Theodoros Prodromos a list of eastern geographical & ethnic names Certainty: 1
1139
Certainty: 2 Celebrations after the return of Ioannes II from Syria & Cilicia Certainty: 2
Certainty: 2 Literary work celebrating Isaakios Porphyrogennetos after his return Certainty: 2
Certainty: 2 Operations, building & preparations in Western Anatolia Certainty: 2
Certainty: 1 Theodoros Prodromos began to write poems of pure begging Certainty: 1
1140
Certainty: 2 Theodoros Prodromos was to leave the capital with the metropolitan of Trebizond Certainty: 2
Certainty: 1 Theodoros Prodromos was ill with a severe sickness (smallpox?) Certainty: 1
1141
Certainty: 1 Poems of Theodoros Prodromos to the learned monk Ioannikios Certainty: 1
Certainty: 1 Poems of Theodoros Prodromos to Theodoros Stypeiotes Certainty: 1
1149
Certainty: 3 Manuel returned in triumph to Constantinople for the winter Certainty: 3
1150
Certainty: 0 Michael Italikos sent letters to Theodoros Prodromos, one via Michael the priest
In one letter from Michael Italikos to Theodoros Prodromos, lard was compared to cheese. Another was sent via Michael the priest, an ardent admirer of Theodoros, whose poems he knew by heart. He was to take him a letter in the capital, reporting the real news orally. Italikos and Prodromos were such friends as to be more singular than plural, despite the distance between them, and each felt elements of the other's environment