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caitlinrgreen's profile
Dr Caitlin Green
Dr Caitlin Green
Dr Caitlin Green
@caitlinrgreen

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Dr Caitlin Green

@caitlinrgreen

History, archaeology, place-names & early lit. Main research on post-Roman Britain & Anglo-Saxon England; also long-distance trade, migration & contact.

Cornwall/Lincolnshire
caitlingreen.org
Joined August 2014

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    1. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Mar 10

      The seal of Edward the Confessor, d. 1066 — included the Byzantine title basileus, which was intermittently used by the 10th- to 11th-century English kings: https://www.academia.edu/2127281/From_Anglorum_basileus_to_Norman_Saint_The_Transformation_of_Edward_the_Confessor …pic.twitter.com/4IOuAk2o5n

      2 replies 30 retweets 81 likes
      Show this thread
    2. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Mar 11

      For Joseph of Canterbury's visit to Constantinople in c. 1090 and his encounter with 'men from his own homeland… who were part of the emperor’s household', see this great blog post by @Pseudo_Isidore.pic.twitter.com/RmF2bQszZW

      "When therefore he arrived there with God's guidance, and asked where the treasury was stored, he found certain men from his own homeland and his own friends, who were part of the emperor's household..."
      2 replies 5 retweets 24 likes
      Show this thread
    3. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Mar 11

      Dr Caitlin Green Retweeted Dr Caitlin Green

      For some slightly earlier links between Britain and the Byzantine Empire, see https://twitter.com/caitlinrgreen/status/721621412037992448 … :)

      Dr Caitlin Green added,

      Dr Caitlin Green @caitlinrgreen
      Britain, the Byzantine Empire & the Saxon 'Heptarchy': a L9thC Arabic description of Britain http://www.caitlingreen.org/2016/04/heptarchy-harun-ibn-yahya.html … pic.twitter.com/y94Zs3zzvF
      1 reply 8 retweets 34 likes
      Show this thread
    4. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Mar 12

      Worth noting that whilst main influx of 'English Varangians' to Constantinople came in the late 11thC, were probably earlier individual Anglo-Saxons there e.g. this Byzantine seal of c.1030/1040 from Winchester, prob from a Varangian's contract of service: https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=hqskIWgAaxwC&lpg=PA680&pg=PA680#v=onepage&q&f=false …pic.twitter.com/j2UpFgRJVS

      1 reply 6 retweets 34 likes
      Show this thread
    5. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Mar 13

      Disc from a pendant showing the Byzantine empress Theodora Porphyrogenita (1055–56), found nr Hitchin, Hertfordshire: https://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/record/id/725343 …pic.twitter.com/Ivn1gRM6Zb

      2 replies 11 retweets 36 likes
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    6. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Mar 16

      Slightly earlier, a silver Byzantine coin of Romanus III (1028–34), gilded & mounted as a pendant; found near Hertford: https://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/record/id/216514 …pic.twitter.com/7RUcR1hdMr

      2 replies 16 retweets 61 likes
      Show this thread
    7. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Mar 16

      Dr Caitlin Green Retweeted Dr Caitlin Green

      When the Byzantine Emperor himself actually visited England in 1400–01:https://twitter.com/caitlinrgreen/status/944889804029874179 …

      Dr Caitlin Green added,

      Dr Caitlin Green @caitlinrgreen
      A Christmas visitor: the Byzantine emperor's trip to London in the winter of 1400–01 — a new post by me :) http://www.caitlingreen.org/2017/12/byzantine-emperor-london.html … pic.twitter.com/qATWud988g
      Show this thread
      4 replies 17 retweets 47 likes
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    8. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Mar 22

      An anecdote concerning a fight between Hardigt, a man sent by the Anglo-Saxon emigrants to the Emperor, and some lions at Constantinople, from the Laon chronicle account of Nova Anglia, see http://www.caitlingreen.org/2018/03/wulfric-of-lincoln-byzantine-ambassador.html …pic.twitter.com/7ymYUuAeTN

      TEXT: 'the Oriental Angli sent a man called Hardigt to the Emperor. He was reputed to be the strongest of all the Angli, for which reason he was suspect to the Greeks, who cunningly let loose a lion to devour him [which he then defeated]... The Emperor appointed this man leader of all his guards and not long afterwards made him commander of the naval forces'.
      9 replies 34 retweets 74 likes
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    9. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Apr 4

      Some tombstones of 'English Varangians' were apparently still to be seen at Constantinople in 1865, but were subsequently destroyed: https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=qocKfNid3SUC&lpg=PA147&pg=PA147#v=onepage&q&f=false …pic.twitter.com/Fa5Wjh22EX

      4 replies 12 retweets 32 likes
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    10. Johanna deMartin‏ @OnlyRealJohanna Apr 4
      Replying to @caitlinrgreen

      It's informative tweets like these that make me happy to have come across you, Dr Green. Truly an enrichment of my timeline, thank you! 🙂

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
      Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Apr 4
      Replying to @OnlyRealJohanna

      Very kind of you to say! :)

      3:15 PM - 4 Apr 2018
      • 1 Like
      • Johanna deMartin
      0 replies 0 retweets 1 like

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