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TwoPercentTokes t1_ir2e4me wrote

The article also says Byzantine Era, and at the point they were firmly Greek Romans.

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AeonsOfStrife t1_ir2fe5x wrote

Well, the early "Byzantine" era (It's just late antiquity Roman, Eastern Roman if you must) did still have Latin usage for much of it until Heraclius at an official state level. So I couldn't quite go that far as I didn't catch the exact date. Maybe you're right though, if it's post Heraclius than it would be Greek Romans.

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HermanCainsGhost t1_ir2hkac wrote

It'd have to be super early Byzantine era, as Christianity was pretty solidly established after not too long - I can't imagine much support after 450, or maybe 550 at the absolute latest for a Hercules/Heracles statue.

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John_Hunyadi t1_ir34vg1 wrote

It estimates around 200AD. Ya coulda just read the article…

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HermanCainsGhost t1_ir3djtx wrote

Then that's not Byzantine era at all.

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snkn179 t1_ir48818 wrote

Bunch of people misreading the article. It says the statue dates back to the 2nd century CE (100-200 CE), the peak of the Roman Empire. It is not stated where in the Empire the statue was originally built, as this is not known. However it was later used to adorn a Greek building during the Byzantine period around the 8th or 9th century. During this time, the locals would have referred to it as Heracles.

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ieatpickleswithmilk t1_ir2mewc wrote

The article states that the statue was sculpted during the Roman era, around the 2nd century AD but last adorned buildings during the Byzantine era in the 8th or 9th century. I believe Latin was at least spoken by some people during the 2nd century since many inscriptions in Latin have been found in the city from that time period.

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Ypnos666 t1_ir53ya0 wrote

The lingua franca of the East Roman Empire was Greek, throughout its history with Latin only used for administrative purposes. It would have been Herakles, son of Dias.

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NordWithaSword t1_ir4ks8o wrote

2nd century AD was Peak empire, we're talking Trajan/Hadrian times.

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