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"I can't say it's exactly as it would've been, but it comes much closer to what an object like that would've looked like," she said in a phone interview. The exact circumstances of why Justin gave Rome the relic are unclear. Guido noted that even though the eastern Byzantine Empire gained prominence in Constantinople after the 476 fall of the Roman Empire, Rome remained a religious capital because it was the "city of martyrs"
-- where Saints Peter and Paul were buried. Emperor Justin clearly wanted to give the pope and people of Rome "a recognition of Rome as a city of Christianity," Guido said. At the time, most parts of Christ's cross were in the hands of the Byzantine emperor in Constantinople after being moved from Jerusalem in the 4th century, Kalavrezou noted. "This is one of the earliest examples of this imperial gift, where he (Justin) shows the power he has in his hands
-- to control the most important relic in Christiandom and to have the luxury to make a gift of that," she said from Washington, where she is a visiting scholar at the Dumbarton Oaks Byzantine research library. The cross will be on public display inside St. Peter's Basilica through April 12.
[Associated
Press;
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