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Notes -
I don't think it's reasonable to expect much accuracy from historical fiction unless the author explicitly states (e. g., in the introduction) that he has made an effort in that direction. Do you expect the escapades described in The Three Musketeers and its sequels (historical fiction written in the 1800s about the 1600s) to be accurate?
I think it all comes down to clear communication of intent. I give something like Hulu's the Great a lot of slack because it explicitly reminds you it's "an (occasionally) true story" on every title card. It's a farce using the life of Catherine the Great as loose inspiration and set dressing, and never pretends to be anything more.
The classics of course get a pass by virtue of being classics. And I can enjoy them as time capsules into what the past thought about its own past. Reading about what William Shakespeare thought of Julius Caesar is historically interesting in much the same way learning about the actual Julius Caesar is.
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