
Classical Victorians
Scholars, Scoundrels and Generals in Pursuit of Antiquity
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Victorian Britain set out to make the ancient world its own. This is the story of how it failed. It is the story of the headmaster who bludgeoned his wife to death, then calmly sat down to his Latin. It is the story of the embittered classical prodigy who turned to gin and opium - and the virtuoso forger who fooled the greatest scholars of the age. It is a history of hope: a general who longed to be an Homeric hero, a bankrupt poet who longed to start a revolution. Victorian classicism was defined by hope - but shaped by uncertainty. Packed with forgotten characters and texts, with the roar of the burlesque-stage and the mud of the battlefield, this book offers a rich insight into nineteenth-century culture and society. It explores just how difficult it is to stake a claim on the past.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Series editors’ preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Introduction: the resurrection men
- Chapter 2 Old-fashioned ambition (a Victorian seduction)
- Chapter 3 In search of an empire of memory
- Chapter 4 The children of Babel
- Appendix A Anglican bishops in office in 1800 and 1865
- Appendix B Students awarded Exhibitions at Balliol College, Oxford between 1870 and 1879
- Appendix C Anglican archdeacons in office in 1840
- Bibliography
- Index