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Memoirs of My Life and Writings

Edward Gibbons Intellectual Journey and the Making of The Decline and Fall

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  • 106 stránek
  • 4 hodiny čtení

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Edward Gibbons Memoirs of My Life and Writings offers a masterclass in intellectual autobiography, tracing the evolution of the historian whose Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire redefined Enlightenment historiography. Written with unflinching self-scrutiny, Gibbon dissects his transformation from a sickly child into Europes preeminent chronicler of imperial collapse, blending scholarly rigor with wry reflections on personal failures and triumphs. The memoir reveals how Gibbons Swiss education and Roman epiphany at the Capitoline coalesced into a lifelong obsession with civilizational decay. He meticulously reconstructs his research methodology, from scouring Byzantine chronicles to defending his controversial treatment of early Christianity, while candidly addressing critics who accused him of undermining religious orthodoxy. Gibbons narrative oscillates between the grand his philosophical debates with Diderot and Hume and the intimate, including his thwarted romance and fraught relationship with his father. The work stands as both a manifesto for empirical history and a meditation on how private obsessions fuel public legacies, essential reading for students of historiography and Enlightenment thought.

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Memoirs of My Life and Writings, Edward Gibbon

Jazyk
Rok vydání
2025
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Titul
Memoirs of My Life and Writings
Podtitul
Edward Gibbons Intellectual Journey and the Making of The Decline and Fall
Jazyk
anglicky
Vazba
měkká
Počet stran
106
ISBN13
9782322613571
Série
Štítky
Biografie
Anotace
Edward Gibbons Memoirs of My Life and Writings offers a masterclass in intellectual autobiography, tracing the evolution of the historian whose Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire redefined Enlightenment historiography. Written with unflinching self-scrutiny, Gibbon dissects his transformation from a sickly child into Europes preeminent chronicler of imperial collapse, blending scholarly rigor with wry reflections on personal failures and triumphs. The memoir reveals how Gibbons Swiss education and Roman epiphany at the Capitoline coalesced into a lifelong obsession with civilizational decay. He meticulously reconstructs his research methodology, from scouring Byzantine chronicles to defending his controversial treatment of early Christianity, while candidly addressing critics who accused him of undermining religious orthodoxy. Gibbons narrative oscillates between the grand his philosophical debates with Diderot and Hume and the intimate, including his thwarted romance and fraught relationship with his father. The work stands as both a manifesto for empirical history and a meditation on how private obsessions fuel public legacies, essential reading for students of historiography and Enlightenment thought.