Talk:Reims Gospel
A fact from Reims Gospel appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 22 January 2011 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
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Missing
editWhat date was it created? You don't describe the decorations at all. Johnbod (talk) 15:28, 19 January 2011 (UTC)
No mention of Anna
editI suggest mentioning the myth of a Russian princess, Anna, in the context of the origin of the book. There has already been a Ukrainian vandal that tried to insert it.--Adûnâi (talk) 04:33, 20 February 2019 (UTC)
Modern vandals
editDuring the French Revolution the manuscript disappeared and was not found until the 1830s, when it was discovered in the Reims library by the city librarian, Louis Paris, after a request by a Slovene linguist Jernej Bartol Kopitar who was an administrator at the Vienna Court Library at that time...
This disappearance and appearance story must be supplemented.
Because it symbolizes the disappearance of the old order, history, memory. The summer countdown begins again - French Republican calendar and the world begins to rotate around the Jacobin Club and the universe revolves around Paris. The story is known and its end is in Waterloo. And, of course, for another complete failure of the attempt to falsify history, the Tsarist autocracy in the person of Emperor Alexander I of Russia is to blame.
The Vandals did the same - set a new beginning on the ruins of Punic and Roman Carthage. 85.11.171.206 (talk) 11:52, 1 December 2019 (UTC)
Constantinople
editAccording to some Czech authors, teh Hussites donated the book to Patriarch of Constantiople trying to find some support there. After the fall of Constantiople, it get to France. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.81.165.153 (talk) 19:45, 18 June 2024 (UTC)