Examples of Zeno in the following topics:
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- In 488, Emperor Zeno ordered Theoderic to overthrow the German Foederatus Odoacer, who had likewise been made Patrician and even King of Italy, but who had since betrayed Zeno, supporting the rebellious Leontius.
- Not long after Theoderic became king, he and Zeno worked out an arrangement beneficial to both sides.
- The Ostrogoths needed a place to live, and Zeno was having serious problems with Odoacer, the King of Italy who had come to power in 476.
- Ostensibly a viceroy for Zeno, Odoacer was menacing Byzantine territory and not respecting the rights of Roman citizens in Italy.
- At Zeno's encouragement, Theoderic invaded Odoacer's kingdom.
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- An example is the famous series from Zeno's dichotomy and its mathematical representation:
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- Odoacer generally used the Roman honorific patrician, granted by the Emperor Zeno, but is referred to as a king (Latin rex) in many documents.
- As Odoacer's position improved, Zeno, the Eastern Emperor, increasingly saw him as a rival.
- When Illus, master of soldiers of the Eastern Empire, asked for Odoacer’s help in 484 in his struggle to depose Zeno, Odoacer invaded Zeno’s westernmost provinces.
- Zeno responded first by inciting the Rugi of present-day Austria to attack Italy.
- In his quest to destroy Odoacer, Zeno promised Theoderic the Great and his Ostrogoths the Italian peninsula if they were to defeat and remove Odoacer from power.
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- Zeno's Paradoxes are a set of philosophical problems devised by an ancient Greek philosopher to support the doctrine that the truth is contrary to one's senses.
- Simply stated, one of Zeno's paradoxes says: There is a point, A, that wants to move to another point, B.
- Zeno's mistake is in the assumption that the sum of an infinite number of finite steps cannot be finite.
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- When Leo died in 474, Zeno and Ariadne's younger son succeeded to the throne as Leo II, with Zeno as regent.
- When Leo II died later that year, Zeno became emperor.
- The end of the Western Empire is sometimes dated to 476, early in Zeno's reign, when the Germanic Roman general Odoacer deposed the titular Western Emperor Romulus Augustulus, but declined to replace him with another puppet.
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- They include many very well known churches, such as Santa Maria in Cosmedin, in Rome; the Baptistery, in Florence; and San Zeno Maggiore, in Verona.
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- The emperor depicted, however, is usually identified as Justinian, or possibly Anastasius I or Zeno.