Of course the Remanada can only be "reliably" dated to the Second Era, when the Imperial University refuses to open its libraries to honest scholarship, and the records of the monastery at Weynon were lost to daedra before they could be properly examined. But the evidence is there, whether Professor Hasphat accepts it or not...
Fashion and family resemblances set aside, professor, historical accounts confirm that Reman II was born three decades after his father's death.
With all this locking of libraries the losing of records, I'm not sure if I should trust these historical accounts.
It does not surprise, though it does disappoint, the Temple that our most esteemed opponent continues relentlessly to diminish the House of Cyrodiil. All know of his unfortunate dishonesty in the service of the Hlaalu, but perhaps the street is not aware that since returning to the Province, he has taken as his patron one Casmon Oricoses, a notoriously corrupt bureaucrat who has every motive in the aftermath of the Oblivion Crisis to elevate the uniquely august status of the House of Septim. Even ignoring the ties between Cuhlecain and the Reman dynasty and the questions surrounding his assassination, the Professor's motive in diminishing the former Empire is clearly suspect.
The thing that confuses me here is, how can our esteemed Professor's agenda be to elevate the House of Septim by downplaying the Reman's, when post-Oblivion Crisis the Septim's status is at a peak beyond reproach? What ground does he have to make by taking the approach you accuse him of? In the absence of a real motive for lying I tend to prefer trusting people, and I can't see how this could be a legitimate motive when there's nothing to be gained by it...
Why do we require Reman Cyrodiil to have special mythic significance? Aside from the obvious need for his successors to retroactively justify their rule over the whole of Tamriel... You might consider their use of the Amulet of Kings to have been justification enough, but as I have said, people like a good story.
Because having a mythic significance automatically earns you double cool points, which is very helpful during the "which mythic figure do you like the most" polls.
If it was truly simply Septim propaganda concerning being able to wear the Amulet, then your point stands, if not (or if the myths may work retroactively to change that truth) then that mythic significance would be required as AP suggested. Besides, how does simple Septim propaganda literally stop somebody from wearing the jewelry (as you may witness in-game), unless the mythic were playing some part?
I don't think its necessarily
required that he have special significance, but as you say it makes the story more interesting and that has power. The forces the Dwemer played with can do more than make metal last a long time, get enough people to believe the story, add a little magick and suddenly history becomes rewritten... and the question still stands if you wouldn't mind putting on your philosopher's mask for a moment, how can you separate 'true' from 'created' myths in such a world as that?
Woah, never knew THAT. I have seen them around and to think all this time they've been devs. #$@%
Seen them around? One just registered and the other almost never posts...