Forwarded from History of The Basileía tôn Rhōmaíōn
The newly appointed Patriarch, Alexios of Constantinople, entered the bedchamber to give Basileios the Eucharist… The Basileus proclaimed:
The Basileus is dead! The Victor against the Rebels, the Conqueror of Bulgars, Georgians, and Armenians, the subduer of Saracens, departs this world into the Kingdom of God!
The bells ring out, and the cries of the people are heard! The Generals surround their Basileus, as they carry him down the Mese to the Church of St. John the Theologian. May he rest among the forefathers, for the ages, and may the Lord lead us to victory!
“O, my brother…rule in my stead, and protect Rhomania…for I know come to see the Lord and to join our parents…” - Basileios II Pophryogennetos
The Basileus is dead! The Victor against the Rebels, the Conqueror of Bulgars, Georgians, and Armenians, the subduer of Saracens, departs this world into the Kingdom of God!
The bells ring out, and the cries of the people are heard! The Generals surround their Basileus, as they carry him down the Mese to the Church of St. John the Theologian. May he rest among the forefathers, for the ages, and may the Lord lead us to victory!
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Forwarded from History of The Basileía tôn Rhōmaíōn
As Basileios II Porphyrogennetos departs this world for the next, the Varangians and Romans mourn. On his tomb, the engraving would read:
…To the church of the Hagia Sophia, the mourning Romans make their way. The Last Son of Romanos II, Konstantinos VIII Porphyrogennetos, is brought upon the Omphalion, and the people chant:
“From the day that the King of Heaven called upon me to become the Emperor, the great overlord of the world, no one saw my spear lie idle.
I stayed alert throughout my life and protected the children of the New Rome, valiantly campaigning both in the West and at the outposts of the East ... O, man, seeing now my tomb here, reward me for my campaigns with your prayers.”
…To the church of the Hagia Sophia, the mourning Romans make their way. The Last Son of Romanos II, Konstantinos VIII Porphyrogennetos, is brought upon the Omphalion, and the people chant:
Πολυχρόνιον ποιῆσαι, Κύριος ὁ Θεός,
τὸν εὐσεβέστατον καὶ πορφυρογέννητον βασιλέα ἡμῶν, Κωνσταντῖνον!
Κύριε, φύλαττε αύτον είς πολλά έτη! - Patriarch Alexios I of Constantinople and the Clergy of the Hagia Sophia
Forwarded from Cobson's Crunchy Cheese Factory (Nanner McDuck)
In the 80s/90s, Al Bundy was supposed to be comically fat and poor.
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Forwarded from The Blindspot Archives
Who is the president? Netanyahu or Trump? 12.29.25
Same suit. Same red tie. Same staging.
The visual language is unity, authority, and alignment. Two leaders presented as interchangeable symbols of power, not as representatives of distinct nations or roles. The optics collapse hierarchy. It’s deliberately ambiguous who leads and who follows.
In diplomacy, this isn’t accidental. Dress, posture, and framing are part of the message. When everything is mirrored, sovereignty blurs and that seems to be the point.
Same suit. Same red tie. Same staging.
The visual language is unity, authority, and alignment. Two leaders presented as interchangeable symbols of power, not as representatives of distinct nations or roles. The optics collapse hierarchy. It’s deliberately ambiguous who leads and who follows.
In diplomacy, this isn’t accidental. Dress, posture, and framing are part of the message. When everything is mirrored, sovereignty blurs and that seems to be the point.
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