This is also a cornerstone of important conspiracy theories we will come to entertain.
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I have much to say on the details of Theophanes, but I feel your exhaustion. You are tired. This is tedious. We pass over all of that unless there is demand. You want detail on these sources, I will drown you in it. We go to the second major source.
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Patriarch Nikephoros I, Breviarium / Short History. I don#t have a good picture of the earliest manuscript for you, sorry. Only this black-and-wide thing. Still that's the first page, that's what it looks like.pic.twitter.com/CN01vhYHAa
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What's interesting about the Short History, is we only have this and one other manuscript, and the other manuscript has an entirely different version of the text. It seems Theophanes produced two unfinished rather different drafts.
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Anyway, there is a lot of other evidence for the 7th-century world, but this is the narrative frame we hang everything on. Both Theophanes & Nikephorus depend upon the same set of lost sources, so they're not totally independent. But we must believe them, or not.
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Soon (almost surely tomorrow): A by-the-book post-Justinian political history. You survive that, we get to Interesting Things.
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Oh, and I forgot to note, the Breviary of Nikephorus os available to you (also in good translation) here: Patriarch Nikephoros of Constantinople, ‘Short History,” ed. & trans. Cyril Mango, Washington DC 1990.
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End of conversation
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