Greek speaking Southern Italy, with its mixed population which comprised also Latins and Arabs, was an area open to cultural interaction. The article deals with two examples of graeco-latin graphic interference both dating around the year 1100, from a milieu connected with Rome and/or Grottaferrata. Vat. gr. 1214 (containing Theodorus Studite) and Vat. gr. 781 (a lectionary) were copied around the year 1000, as by-products of the so-called 'Nilian calligraphic school'.
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