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Anna Komnena y la Alexiada como acto de resistencia cultural a la política de Manuel Komnenos

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La Alexiada ha sido frecuentemente interpretada de manera sesgada, ya sea imponiéndole a su autora unos criterios más severos que a otros autores bizantinos por su excepcionalidad o leyendo toda su obra en base a detalles sobre su vida privada. Si bien es natural tener en cuenta los motivos de un autor/a para escribir su obra, en el caso de Anna ...
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A description of the jousts of Manuel I Komnenos

Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, 2002
AbstractThe thirteenth-century manuscript Greek 1409 in the Vatican Library contains an anonymous Greek ekphrasis of the jousts of an unnamed Byzantine emperor. The text, which has interest for both historians and art historians, has been cited on several occasions in the scholarly literature, but never analyzed in detail.
Lynn Jones, Henry Maguire
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Manuel Komnenos and the Great Palace

Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, 1978
That the emperor Manuel I Komnenos (1143–80) was responsible for some building activity in the Great Palace of Constantinople is a fact well attested by published sources and not entirely unknown to modern scholarship. However, the armchair archaeology of this work remains confused and obscure, and can benefit from a fresh review of the evidence.
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The Empire of Manuel I Komnenos, 1143–1180

Istoricheskii vestnik, 1993
The reign of Manuel I (1143–1180) marked the high point of the revival of the Byzantine empire under the Comnenian dynasty. It was, however, followed by a rapid decline, leading to the sack of Constantinople by the Fourth Crusade in 1204. This book, the first devoted to Manuel's reign for over eighty years, re-evaluates the emperor and his milieu in ...
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