| 41. | The romanticised picture of Armstrong was promoted by the nineteenth-century writings of Sir Walter Scott and Herbert Maxwell.
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| 42. | Others have accused him of a romanticised and prejudicial promotion of'primitivism'through the medium of archetypal theory.
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| 43. | The description of these basement rooms as " dungeons " stems from the romanticised castle studies of the 19th century.
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| 44. | Many actual events were largely romanticised or highly exaggerated, while some fictitious stories were also included, for dramatic effect.
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| 45. | Despite Campi s choice to depict the lower working classes, his treatment of these subjects was neither sympathetic nor romanticised.
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| 46. | If one could be found for " systematised " I reckon we could get away with leaving quotes off " romanticised.
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| 47. | A romanticised account of Trunajaya's death appears in the 18th-century Central Javanese " babads ".
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| 48. | He was romanticised after his death and became the inspiration for pirate-themed works of fiction across a range of genres.
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| 49. | Though renowned at the time, and later highly romanticised, the combat had no effect on the outcome of the war.
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| 50. | Sympathy for the working class is obviously paramount, but it is also common to romanticise and stereotype non-Russian characters.
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