/u/RomanItalianEuropean's posts
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Following the fall of the Roman Empire in Italy, throughout the Middle Ages and Modernity, the inhabitants of the city of Rome (including the Pope) continued to be called Romans. How were they called by those living in the Byzantine Empire (who also called themselves Romaioi/Romans).?
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Classification of Greek archipelagos in Italy seems different from the one I found in English and Greek wikipedia, is this a classification used in Greece?
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What was the content of each of the three sessions of the Council of Trent (1545-1563)? How did the relationship between the Pope and European monarchs define the topics, goals and results of the Council?
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For some reason I can't find an answer to this simple question. Within the Roman empire, of what province was the city of Byzantium/Constantinople part?
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For the ancient Romans the concept "Republic" meant public thing aka "state/government" and "Roman Empire" simply meant the "Empire of Rome". How come modern historians use these terms in a completely different way?
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Classical Arabs called Rome "Rumiyah" and the the Byzantines "Rūm". Rūm was a derivative of Romaioi (greek for "Romans" used by the Byzantines for self-description). My question is: how did they call the "Romans" (both the pre-byzantium Romans and the people living in Rome/Rumiyah).
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