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Count Belisarius (1938)

af Robert Graves

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MedlemmerAnmeldelserPopularitetGennemsnitlig vurderingOmtaler
1,0231720,354 (3.72)70
The sixth century was not a peaceful time for the Roman empire. Invaders threatened on all fronties, but they grew to respect and fear the name of Belisarius, the Emperor Justinian's greatest general. With this book Robert Graves again demonstrates his command of a vast historical subject, creating a startling and vivid picture of a decadent era.… (mere)
  1. 10
    Homer's Daughter af Robert Graves (longway)
  2. 10
    The Secret History af Procopius (Michael.Rimmer)
  3. 00
    Das griechische Feuer af Luigi Malerba (longway)
  4. 00
    Kejser Hadrians Erindringer af Marguerite Yourcenar (nessreader)
    nessreader: Literary historical fiction, about the later roman empire, the decline and fall. sumptuously written.
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Engelsk (11)  Hollandsk (2)  Spansk (2)  Alle sprog (15)
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Een fictieve biografie van Heer Belisarius. Een huisslaaf doet het verhaal van zijn meester en meesteres.

Het is een boeiende levensbeschrijving. Wat er historisch wel of niet klopt is moeilijk te bepalen. Het is en blijft fictie en onvermijdelijk past de schrijver dingen aan om voor een hedendaagse lezer begrijpelijk te zijn. De maten die meermaals worden aangehaald-voet en vooral meters e.d.- zijn natuurlijk niet van de zesde eeuw waarin alles zich afspeelt. Cactussen in Noord-Afrika zijn dan weer echt fout en soldaten die een hekel hebben aan paardenvlees is de eigen taboes overzetten op een verhaal over een tijd toen heel andere waarden en normen golden.

Merkwaardig is ook dat de schrijver het heeft over de ramadan. In de zesde eeuw? Bestond het dus al voor het ontstaan van de islam?

De normen en waarden van het christendom worden aanvaardbaar in het hele verhaal verwerkt. Toch blijft de indruk dat het hier gaat om verdoken bekeringsijver. Een christen zou een beter mens zijn...en het boek eindigt tenslotte met Belisarius te zien als een soort Christusfiguur. ( )
  Rodemail | Feb 20, 2023 |
Pretty good historical novel of a general in Byzantium in the early Christian era. ( )
  kslade | Dec 8, 2022 |
Having enjoyed Graves's Claudius novels, I decided to have a go at this book, set in the reign of the Byzantine emperor Justinian. Graves has distilled the official histories of the time, and more gossipy works like Procopius' Secret History, to create a moving story about the ingratitude of rulers. Large parts of the book are filled with descriptions of battles, but Graves writes very well and never allows them to become tedious. Besides, the Byzantine Empire certainly has a lot of colour to keep the interest up. The emperor Justinian came out of the whole thing extremely poorly. I don’t know how far Graves exaggerated his character, but I found him cowardly, ungrateful, blind, unstrategic, easily-misled, henpecked and generally flawed in every possible way; worst of all, he didn’t even have the sense to recognise that Belisarius was the one man in the Empire whom he could trust implicitly. It may be true, as some critics claim, that Belisarius is a little too good to be true; but nevertheless it's a convincing and powerful story of injustice, which is all the more moving because it is based on historical events. ( )
  TheIdleWoman | Dec 8, 2017 |
Cast in the form of a chronicle/memoir, written by Eugenius, the eunuch servant of Belisarius's wife, Antonina, this purports to tell the story of Count [Generalissimo] Belisarius, of the Eastern Roman army in the days of Justinian and Theodora, 6th century AD. It begins with the boy Belisarius and reveals his quick-thinking at so young an age. Becoming general, he cuts a wide swath through North Africa, Roman cities in Italy and Sicily. We see his tactical and strategic genius. He also deals with machinations at the court of Justinian and Theodora set against the broader history of that period.

The style was stilted, using pseudo-Victorian language. This put me off somewhat. The first few chapters introduced the characters and gave them personalities in broad strokes. The book was more interesting from Belisarius's quelling of the Nika [Victory] Riots, through his battles to regain the Western Roman Empire and final fate: 350+ pages or so. I could not get close to any of them; writing was mere reporting of facts as Eugenius remembered them. I believe much was taken from Procopius, historian who appears in the story. What he wrote we can't trust completely; the man had his own agenda.

Recommended, as a classic of the 6th century. ( )
  janerawoof | May 21, 2016 |
Robert Graves's models for Count Belisarius include some of the great historical works of classical antiquity: Livy, Thucydides, Herodotus, and certainly Xenophon in the Persian war sections. The novel is set in the sixth century of our era. Belisarius is perhaps the last loyal general the Roman Empire can still count on. He is deeply Christian (Orthodox) but with an admirable tolerance for divergent views (Arianism, Monophysitism, etc.). He is also a military leader of genius. The accounts of his successes in Persia, Carthage, and Italy, are depicted at length. The Seige of Rome against an Ostrogoth army ten times the size of Belisarius's own constitutes a set piece of extraordinary brilliance. If you like any of the classical histories mentioned, you'll like this book. Be advised, however, that it tends to be better written than its models--or, I should say, than the English translations of those models that I have read. I wanted to read it because I liked the lethal palace intrigue so abundant in I, Claudius. That's here alright but the ramp up is longish. The first bits of intrigue don't begin until p. 102 of this edition; the backstabbing politics in earnest not until p. 150. But then hold on to your hoody because the last 300 pages are wonderful.

The book is narrated by Eugenius, the eunuch slave of Antonina, the entertainer and prostitute whom we first meet at a soiree given by the fourteen year old Belisarius's tutor. The Empress herself, Theodora, also a former prostitute, is an old friend of Antonina. In their youth they clubbed together with other girls and opened a brothel in Adrianople. Emperor Justinian, who met his empress in that house of pain, Graves's depicts as not very smart and easily led by those motivated almost solely by self interest. They ruthlessly smear Belisarius's squeaky-clean reputation and eventually succeed in driving this brilliant man from Justinian's good graces. I can't begin to hint at the intrigue and casuistry on display here. The sheer cruelty and malice. The incompetence, usually driven by jealousy, of Belisarius's generals. You simply must read it for yourself. Suffice it to say that the last 300 pages are on a par with I, Claudius and somewhat better in my view than Claudius the God. I think Graves's may have wanted to provide a more in-depth opening since details of the late Roman Empire are less well known than those of the classical period. That's my guess, anyway. Exuberantly recommended despite the slow start, especially for lovers of the historical novel.

This beautiful edition was produced by The Folio Society (London). ( )
  William345 | Jun 11, 2014 |
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When he was seven years old, Belisarius was told by his widowed mother that it was now time for him to leave her for a while, and her retainers of the household and estate at Thracian Tchermen, and go to school at Adrianople, a city some miles away, where he would be under the guardianship of her brother, the Distinguished Modestus.
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The sixth century was not a peaceful time for the Roman empire. Invaders threatened on all fronties, but they grew to respect and fear the name of Belisarius, the Emperor Justinian's greatest general. With this book Robert Graves again demonstrates his command of a vast historical subject, creating a startling and vivid picture of a decadent era.

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Efterladte bibliotek: Robert Graves

Robert Graves har et Efterladt bibliotek. Efterladte Biblioteker er de personlige biblioteker fra berømte læsere, registreret af medlemmer fra gruppen Legacy Libraries som er det engelske udtryk for Efterladte Biblioteker.

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