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Walter of Chatillon's Latin epic on the life of Alexander the Great
was a twelfth- and thirteenth-century "best-seller:" scribes
produced over two hundred manuscripts. The poem follows Alexander
from his first successes in Asia Minor, through his conquest of
Persia and India, to his progressive moral degeneration and his
poisoning by a disaffected lieutenant. The Alexandreis exemplifies
twelfth-century discourses of world domination and the exoticism of
the East. But at the same time it calls such dreams of mastery into
question, repeatedly undercutting as it does Alexander's claims to
heroism and virtue and by extension, similar claims by the great
men of Walter's own generation. This extraordinarily layered and
subtle poem stands as a high-water mark of the medieval tradition
of Latin narrative literature. Along with David Townsend's revised
translation, this edition provides a rich selection of historical
documents, including other writings by Walter of Chatillon,
excerpts from other medieval Latin epics, and contemporary accounts
of the foreign and "exotic."
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