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Count Belisarius

Count Belisarius

Robert Graves
0/5 ( ratings)
Count Belisauius was first published in Britain in 1938 by Cassell. This edition is based on the text of the first edition, with minor emendations.

By the 6th century, Gaul, Iberia and Italy had all been lost to the barbarians. The Roman Empire survived only in the East, beset by enemies on every side. For a brief time, one man reversed the decline, fought off Persians, Goths and Vandals, and even reconquered Rome itself – Belisarius: horseman, archer, swordsman and military genius, descended from barbarians, but who would earn the title ‘last of the Romans’. Robert Graves who brought Classical Rome to life with I, Claudius and Claudius the God, performed no less a feat for the Byzantine Empire with this epic novel of its greatest general, written in 1938. The story is narrated by a eunuch slave who serves Antonina, a one-time dancing girl and prostitute from the circus who was a companion from the Empress Theodora’s disreputable past . Enthroned as Empress, Theodora was in a position to marry her old and trusted friend to the great general Belisarius, and in doing so ensure she could manipulate the man whose fame and prowess made many see him as a rival to the emperor himself. Built on numerous authentic sources, Graves’s novel tells a thrilling tale of victories against all odds and a doomed marriage. Antonina is genuinely devoted to Belisarius, but, unable to escape the political intrigue of the Byzantine court, she will herself become the instrument of Belisarius’ disgrace. Jealousy, mistrust and dissimulation lie at the novel’s heart. As Justinian and Theodora plot and scheme, political and religious factions eddy about them and for all Belisarius’ brilliance, honour and loyalty, his fate at their hands is inevitable.
Language
English
Pages
445
Format
Hardcover
Release
January 01, 1938

Count Belisarius

Robert Graves
0/5 ( ratings)
Count Belisauius was first published in Britain in 1938 by Cassell. This edition is based on the text of the first edition, with minor emendations.

By the 6th century, Gaul, Iberia and Italy had all been lost to the barbarians. The Roman Empire survived only in the East, beset by enemies on every side. For a brief time, one man reversed the decline, fought off Persians, Goths and Vandals, and even reconquered Rome itself – Belisarius: horseman, archer, swordsman and military genius, descended from barbarians, but who would earn the title ‘last of the Romans’. Robert Graves who brought Classical Rome to life with I, Claudius and Claudius the God, performed no less a feat for the Byzantine Empire with this epic novel of its greatest general, written in 1938. The story is narrated by a eunuch slave who serves Antonina, a one-time dancing girl and prostitute from the circus who was a companion from the Empress Theodora’s disreputable past . Enthroned as Empress, Theodora was in a position to marry her old and trusted friend to the great general Belisarius, and in doing so ensure she could manipulate the man whose fame and prowess made many see him as a rival to the emperor himself. Built on numerous authentic sources, Graves’s novel tells a thrilling tale of victories against all odds and a doomed marriage. Antonina is genuinely devoted to Belisarius, but, unable to escape the political intrigue of the Byzantine court, she will herself become the instrument of Belisarius’ disgrace. Jealousy, mistrust and dissimulation lie at the novel’s heart. As Justinian and Theodora plot and scheme, political and religious factions eddy about them and for all Belisarius’ brilliance, honour and loyalty, his fate at their hands is inevitable.
Language
English
Pages
445
Format
Hardcover
Release
January 01, 1938

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