The International Prester John Project: How A Global Legend Was Created Across Six Centuries

Manuel, Governor of the Romans

The Letter here alludes to Manuel I Komnenus, the Byzantine Emperor. Calling him "governor" (Romeon gubernator) rather than "emperor" (Basileus ton Romeon) appears to be an insult.

Yet Silverberg (p. 47) points out that the term "governor" may have originated in one of the source texts for the Letter, Leo the Archpriest's work on Alexander the great, Historia de Proeliis, in which Alexander writes to his teacher Aristotle that declares to the latter that Ptolemy will be his "governor" upon the former's death. 

The curious constituency the Letter names, "Romans," may allude to the Byzantines as the sole cultural inheritors of Rome or may refer to the manner in which Arab-speaking peoples of the twelfth century referred to all Christians as the "Rûm" during the Crusades.

 







 

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