Barbarians Speaking – The Historiographical Theater and Its Effect in Henry of Latvia’s Chronicon Livoniae
Articles
Ramunė Markevičiūtė
Published 2017-02-20
https://doi.org/10.15388/Litera.2016.3.10429
PDF

Keywords

Medieval historiography
drama
Henry of Latvia
Chronicon Livoniae
dramatic narration
Baltic Crusades
the Barbarians

How to Cite

Markevičiūtė, R. (2017) “Barbarians Speaking – The Historiographical Theater and Its Effect in Henry of Latvia’s Chronicon Livoniae”, Literatūra, 58(3), pp. 43–56. doi:10.15388/Litera.2016.3.10429.

Abstract

Since the times of Herodotus, historiographic accounts have been written employing dramatic narration, thus granting historical figures immediate appearance through direct speech. This kind of historiographical theater, considered to be fictive and unreliable by modern historiographical critique, has a tradition and function in medieval historical accounts. The present paper analyses the purpose and the effect of dramatic narration in medieval texts, focusing on examples in Henry of Latvia’s Chronicon Livoniae. In examining the utterances in direct speech in more detail, it aims to disclose the image of the native peoples in the Baltic, the Barbarians, the way it is constructed by the author, and to determine the significance of dramatic narration in a historical account.

PDF

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 3 4 5 > >>