How to Write History

How to Write History .

Firstly argumentive line has to be there source information too and many relevance about treatment or implement things happened on it make the readers interested to look forward what was unfold on it and state the backgrounds of those who have been written about there.

[1]

Themes

The first part of Lucian’s essay involved a critical attack on contemporary historians. Lucian maintained that they confused history with panegyric, overloaded it with irrelevant details, and weighed it down with overblown rhetoric.[2]

Lucian recommended instead the virtues of clear narration, and the valorisation of truth.[3] He argued that the historian should write for all times, as “a free man, fearless, incorruptible, the friend of truth”;[4] and held up the work of Thucydides as the legislative template for all subsequent historians.[5] He argued that the "historian's sole task is to tell the tale as it happened" which is latter reflected in works of von Ranke among others.

Later influence

  • Edward Gibbon, who wrote of “the inimitable Lucian”, owned the 1776 edition of Quomodo Historia Conscribenda Sit (Oxford)[7]

See also

References

  1. Richter, Daniel S. (2017). "Chapter 21: Lucian of Samosata". In Richter, Daniel S.; Johnson, William A. (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of the Second Sophistic. Vol. 1. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 328-329. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199837472.013.26. ISBN 978-0-19-983747-2.
  2. Butcher, S. H. (1904). Harvard Lectures on Greek Subjects. London: Macmillan and Co., Ltd. p. 249. Retrieved 18 March 2020 via Internet Archive.
  3. M Winkler, Fall of the Roman Empire (2012) p. 181-2
  4. Butcher, S. H. (1904). Harvard Lectures on Greek Subjects. London: Macmillan and Co., Ltd. p. 250. Retrieved 18 March 2020 via Internet Archive.
  5. P J Rhodes, Intro, Thucydides: The Peloponnesian War (OUP 2009) p. l
  6. D Marsh, Lucian and the Latins (1998) p. 29
  7. E Gibbon, Abridged Decline and Fall (Penguin 2005) p. 63 and p. 782
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