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Anonymity
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==Referring to the anonymous== When it is necessary to refer to someone who is anonymous, it is typically necessary to create a type of pseudo-identification for that person. In literature, the most common way to state that the identity of an author is unknown is to refer to them as simply "Anonymous". This is usually the case with older texts in which the author is long dead and unable to claim authorship of a work. When the work claims to be that of some famous author the [[pseudonym]]ous author is identified as "Pseudo-", as in [[Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite]], an author claiming—and long believed—to be [[Dionysius the Areopagite]], an early Christian convert. ''Anonymus'', in its [[Latin]] spelling, generally with a specific city designation, is traditionally used by scholars in the humanities to refer to an ancient writer whose name is not known, or to a manuscript of their work. Many such writers have left valuable historical or literary records: an incomplete list of such ''Anonymi'' is at [[Anonymus (disambiguation)|Anonymus]]. In the [[history of art]], many painting workshops can be identified by their characteristic style and discussed and the workshop's output set in chronological order. Sometimes archival research later identifies the name, as when the "Master of Flémalle"—defined by three paintings in the Städelsches Kunstinstitut in [[Frankfurt]]— was identified as [[Robert Campin]]. The 20th-century art historian [[Bernard Berenson]] methodically identified numerous early Renaissance Florentine and Sienese workshops under such [[sobriquet]]s as "Amico di Sandro" for an anonymous painter in the immediate circle of [[Sandro Botticelli]]. In legal cases, a popularly accepted name to use when it is determined that an individual needs to maintain anonymity is "[[John Doe]]". This name is often modified to "Jane Doe" when the anonymity-seeker is female. The same names are also commonly used when the identification of a dead person is not known. The semi-acronym Unsub is used as law enforcement slang for "Unknown Subject of an Investigation". The [[military]] often feels a need to honor the remains of soldiers for whom identification is impossible. In many countries, such a memorial is named the [[Tomb of the Unknown Soldier]].
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