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national character, a similar emulation was kindled among the   states of Latium and Italy; and in the arts and sciences, they   aspired to equal or surpass their Grecian masters. The empire   of the Cęsars undoubtedly checked the activity and progress   of the human mind; its magnitude might indeed allow some   scope for domestic competition; but when it was gradually   reduced, at first to the East and at last to Greece and Constantinople, the Byzantine subjects were degraded to an   abject and languid temper, the natural effect of their solitary   and insulated state. From the North they were oppressed by   nameless tribes of Barbarians, to whom they scarcely   imparted the appellation of men. The language and religion of   the more polished Arabs were an insurmountable bar to all social intercourse. The conquerors of Europe were their   brethren in the Christian faith; but the speech of the Franks   or Latins was unknown, their manners were rude, and they   were rarely connected, in peace or war, with the successors of   Heraclius. Alone in the universe, the self-satisfied pride of the   Greeks was not disturbed by the comparison of foreign merit;   and it is no wonder if they fainted in the race, since they had   neither competitors to urge their speed, nor judges to crown their victory. The nations of Europe and Asia were mingled by   the expeditions to the Holy Land; and it is under the   Comnenian dynasty that a faint emulation of knowledge and   military virtue was rekindled in the Byzantine empire.   

   Chapter LIV:   

   Origin And Doctrine Of The Paulicians.   

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