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the original German, in Heeren's "Vermischte   Schriften," may be read with great advantage. - M.]   

   Chapter LX:   

   The Fourth Crusade.   
   Part I.   
   Schism Of The Greeks And Latins. - State Of   Constantinople.   
   - Revolt Of The Bulgarians. - Isaac Angelus Dethroned By His   Brother Alexius. - Origin Of The Fourth Crusade. - Alliance Of   The French And Venetians With The Son Of Isaac. - Their   Naval Expedition To Constantinople. - The Two Sieges And   Final Conquest Of The City By The Latins.   
   The restoration of the Western empire by   Charlemagne was   
   speedily followed by the separation of the Greek and Latin   churches. ^1 A religious and national animosity still divides   the two largest communions of the Christian world; and the   schism of Constantinople, by alienating her most useful allies,   and provoking her most dangerous enemies, has precipitated   the decline and fall of the Roman empire in the East.   
   [Footnote 1: In the successive centuries, from the ixth to the   xviiith, Mosheim traces the schism of the Greeks with   learning, clearness, and impartiality; the filioque (Institut.   Hist. Eccles. p. 277,) Leo III. p. 303 Photius, p. 307, 308.   Michael Cerularius, p. 370, 371, &c.]   
   In the course of the present History, the aversion of   the   Greeks for the Latins has been often visible and conspicuous.   It was originally

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