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The princess who rewrote history - Leonora Neville

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    Alexios Komnenos,
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    Byzantine emperor,
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    led his army to meet the Scythian hordes
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    in battle.
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    For good luck,
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    he carried one of the holiest relics
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    in Christendom:
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    the veil that had belonged
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    to the Virgin Mary.
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    Unfortunately, it didn’t help.
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    Not only was his army defeated,
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    but as they fled,
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    the Emperor was stabbed in the buttocks.
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    To make matters worse, a strong wind
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    made the relic too heavy to carry,
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    so he stashed it in some bushes
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    as he escaped.
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    But even as he fled,
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    he managed to slay some Scythians
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    and rescue a few comrades.
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    At least, this is how Alexios' daughter
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    Anna recounted the story,
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    writing nearly 60 years later.
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    She spent the last decade of her long life
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    creating a 500-page history
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    of her father’s reign called The Alexiad.
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    Written in Greek, the book was modeled
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    after ancient Greek epics
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    and historical writings.
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    But Anna had a different, trickier task
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    than the writers in these traditions:
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    as a princess writing
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    about her own family,
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    she had to balance her loyalty to her kin
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    with her obligation
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    to portray events accurately,
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    navigating issues like Alexios’s
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    embarrassing stab to the buttocks.
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    A lifetime of study and participation
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    in her father’s government
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    prepared Anna for this undertaking.
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    Anna was born in 1083,
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    shortly after her father seized control
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    of the Roman Empire
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    following a decade of brutal civil wars
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    and revolts.
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    The empire was deep in decline
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    when he came to power,
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    and threatened from all sides:
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    by the Seljuk Turks in the East,
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    the Normans in the West,
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    and Scythian raiders to the north.
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    Over the course of Anna’s childhood
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    and adolescence,
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    Alexios fought constant military campaigns
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    to secure the frontiers of his empire,
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    even striking up an uneasy alliance
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    with the Crusaders.
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    Meanwhile in Constantinople,
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    Anna fought her own battle.
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    She was expected to study subjects
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    considered proper
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    for a Byzantine princess,
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    like courtly etiquette and the Bible,
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    but preferred classical myth
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    and philosophy.
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    To access this material, she had to learn
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    to read and speak Ancient Greek,
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    by studying secretly at night.
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    Eventually her parents realized
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    how serious she was,
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    and provided her with tutors.
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    Anna expanded her studies
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    to classical literature, rhetoric,
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    history, philosophy, mathematics,
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    astronomy, and medicine.
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    One scholar even complained
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    that her constant requests
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    for more Aristotle commentaries
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    were wearing out his eyes.
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    At age fifteen,
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    Anna married Nikephoros Bryennios
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    to quell old conflicts
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    between their families
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    and strengthen Alexios’s reign.
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    Fortunately, Anna and Nikephoros ended up
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    sharing many intellectual interests,
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    hosting and debating
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    the leading scholars of the day.
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    Meanwhile, Alexios’s military excursions
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    began to pay off,
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    restoring many of the empire’s
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    former territories.
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    As her father aged,
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    Anna and her husband helped her parents
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    with their imperial duties.
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    During this time,
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    Anna reportedly advocated for
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    just treatment of the people
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    in their disputes with the government.
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    After Alexios’s death,
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    Anna’s brother John ascended to the throne
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    and Anna turned back
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    to philosophy and scholarship.
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    Her husband had written a history
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    arguing that his grandfather
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    would have made a better emperor
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    than Alexios,
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    but Anna disagreed.
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    She began working on the Alexiad,
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    which made the case for her father's
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    merits as emperor.
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    Spanning the late 11th and early 12th
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    centuries of Byzantine history,
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    the Alexiad recounts
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    the tumultuous events of Alexios’s reign,
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    and Anna’s own reactions to those events,
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    like bursting into tears at the thought
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    of the deaths of her parents and husband.
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    She may have included these
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    emotional passages in hopes
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    that they would make her writing
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    more palatable to a society
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    that believed women shouldn’t write
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    about battles and empires.
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    While her loyalty to her father
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    was evident in her favorable account
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    of his reign, she also included criticism
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    and her opinions of events.
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    In the centuries after her death,
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    Anna’s Alexiad was copied over and over,
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    and remains an invaluable
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    eyewitness account
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    of Alexios’s reign today.
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    And through her epic historical narrative,
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    Anna Komnene secured
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    her own place in history.
Title:
The princess who rewrote history - Leonora Neville
Speaker:
Leonora Neville
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:55

English subtitles

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