From tyrant to philosopher-king : a literary history of Alexander the Great in Medieval and early modern England / by Charles Russell Stone.

This book sheds light on the evolving reception of the ancient world's most enduring figure and will prove valuable to any reader interested in the modern world's debt to antiquity. Since his death in Babylon in 323 BC, Alexander the Great has inspired an unparalleled legacy founded on both historie...

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Bibliographic Details
Uniform Title:Cursor mundi (Turnhout, Belgium) ; v. 19.
Main Author: Stone, Charles Russell, 1978-
Language:English
Published: Turnhout, Belgium : Brepols, [2013], ©2013.
Series:Cursor mundi (Turnhout, Belgium) ; v. 19.
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Genre:
Physical Description:254 pages ; 24 cm.
Format: Book
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Summary:
This book sheds light on the evolving reception of the ancient world's most enduring figure and will prove valuable to any reader interested in the modern world's debt to antiquity. Since his death in Babylon in 323 BC, Alexander the Great has inspired an unparalleled legacy founded on both histories and legends. From ancient Alexandria to twentieth-century America, and from politics to popular entertainment, he has remained a source of fascination and debate. Today our conception of Alexander rests upon two Roman inventions of history. The first, that of a bloodthirsty tyrant corrupted by Persian decadence, was recovered in medieval monasteries and thrived for centuries, until the second, which viewed Alexander as an enlightened ruler and the head of a harmonious global empire, flourished in the age of humanism. From this clash of intellectual movements arose our modern debates over Alexander as either a madman or a philosopher-king, the epitome of corruption or of ideal government.
Call Number:PN682.A48 S86 2013
ISBN:9782503545394
2503545394