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Robert C Dean's avatar

Wow! This is a very dense essay for someone who doesn’t know the language of contemporary historiography. But I get the bit about the problematic idealization of the classical past that actually steals from that past and robs Greece of so much of what makes it interesting. I intend to read this again and follow up with some of your references. You have given me a lot to think about.

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Anna Comnena's avatar

Thank you for your remarkable work🙏. I've now realized 'cultural co-presences' is not just a combination of wordsyou can find in pannel, but a meant approch to history.

I think you are absolutly right about Renaissance.

At the beginning, I suppose Italian Peninsula politicians proposed themselves as rescue-team to Romaioi's Empire to preserve their gained though centuries influence, certifying their action by blood affinity (I'm thinking about the Piedmont Crusade in 1366 or about the fresco cycle of the 'Torneo dei Cavalieri', by Pisanello, in Mantua Castle, recently proposed to depict Cleophe Malatesta as the daughter of king Brangoire, mother by trick to Hélain;) le Blanc, future heir to the Constantinopolitan throne). Later, much more champions without blemish and fear wanted to join the quest and resolved to pretend cultural affinity if not blood one.

You masterly explained about Carolingian and Othonian agenda in other works, and - may be it's just an idle idea of mines - I suspect even a Norman segment in the plot, undergoing from Abbey Du Bec school to Grosseteste translations of Eustrathius of Niceae and Michael of Ephesus works about Aristotle:)

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