Except it didn't, because now we have people who deny the romanness of the state entirely.
I'm glad I'm just not interested in debating the legitimacy of Medieval states or their national identity then.
Really stupid? Have you learned anything about the historiography?
Yes, actually.
In historiography the most commonly used name for the Byzantine Empire is "Byzantine Empire". That's what historiography says, modern one I mean.
Evidently this whole deal with romaboos being terribly offended by common and normal terminology is, indeed, the product of overly obsessed people who are more concerned about fanboying for failed warlord states that caring anything about actual history.
ou are doing this right now by calling them "Greek in character" which obfuscates a lot of their culture.
No, no, no, no, you're confused.
"Obfuscating the culture" is when you do everything you can to pretend that the Greek state whose official language was Greek, and its regal titles were in Greek, and its political elite was Greek, and was acknowledge to as Greek by all of its neighbours regardless of whether they agreed or not with them being also Romans at the same time, was just "Roman", with no further strings attached to it. Just to give the illusion that hundreds of years of cultural evolution and the shift of the Roman state from the Latin West Mediterranean to the Greek East didn't really happen. That's actual obfuscation of cultural changes of a state through time, for the bizarre purpose of propping the legitimacy of... Some dead state that thought their king was Jesus' right hand guy, or some stupid shit like that.
The Byzantine Empire was a Greek state, and it was a Roman state. It was ethnically and culturally Greek, while being legally Roman and its government was a direct continuation of the Roman state of Caesar and Augustus. The culture of the Byzantines is very clear, like the fact that by the times of the Normans they were using "Latin" as a bad word to refer to all the people in the West they couldn't stand or kept giving them trouble, which is suggesting that something must had really changed from the days when "Rome" used to be Latin itself.
"Byzantine" is not perfectly descriptive.
But it is.
In a single word it has communicated to you that:
1) It's the Roman Empire.
2) It's a Greek polity.
3) It's placed in the Middle Ages from the 7th to the 15th century.
4) It's based in Constantinople.
"Roman Empire" doesn't do that, because it refers to the whole thing from Augustus to the Ottomans. "Eastern Roman Empire" is only a slight improvement, since it includes the whole part of history when Eastern and Western Empires co-existed in Late Antiquity and were still both largely Latin in character. Byzantine is just perfect, a single word to immediately give you a very precise identification of the polity we're talking about and that exact period of Roman history.
We're not going to stop using perfectly well functioning nomenclature because you're afraid someone might think that name is subtly implying the Byzzies weren't "really real epic Romans", which is an utterly meaningless concept and isn't worth caring about ever.
As Aquila pointed out, it would be like if you insisted on calling France Lutetia. It's confusing, arbitrary, and inaccurate.
No. We went over it.
Byzantine Empire is clear, accurate and arbitrary.
Because names
are arbitrary, and they exist just for our convenience, and as explained earlier "Byzantium" is just a very convenient name.
If in a thousand years the most commonly used name for France in historiography will be "Lutetia", for whatever reason, that's gonna be its name. If it's gonna be effective in communicating whatever practical meaning the historians of the year 3000 want to communicate, it's gonna be a good name too. Currently, however, France works for us. Maybe "Frankia" if you want to specify the difference between the early Frankish state from the later modern French state.
I would also ask of the people acknowledging that the "Byzantines" were Rome and saying it doesn't matter what we call them: why do you have to be dragged kicking and screaming into calling it "Eastern Rome" or "Medieval Rome" when historians are moving in that direction and you know it is more accurate?
Have you tried just not caring about the opinions of a few misguided people on a niche gaming forum?
This is obviously not directed at me, because I know very well and my whole argument is that "Byzantine" is a good name because it's a very efficient way to say "Medieval Rome (meaning they were speaking Greek at this time, and they're not the Germano-Latin Holy Roman ones)", so why don't you do yourself a favour and simply stop bothering about the honor of some specific medieval state that hasn't been relevant in centuries?