Ir para o conteúdo

Last Legion

Last Legion

Last Legion

Last Legion

por Manfredi, Valerio Massimo

  • Usado
  • Muito Bom
  • Capa dura
Condição
Muito Bom
ISBN 10
0333907698
ISBN 13
9780333907696
Livreiro
Avaliação do vendedor:
Este vendedor ganhou uma 2 de 5 estrelas de clientes da Biblio.
GORING BY SEA, West Sussex, United Kingdom
4 Cópias disponíveis deste vendedor
(Você pode adicionar mais na finalização da compra.)
Preço do item
€ 2,55
€ 10,25 Envio para USA
Entrega Padrão: 7 a 40 dias

Opções de envio

Formas de pagamento

  • Visa
  • Mastercard
  • American Express
  • Discover
  • PayPal

Sobre este item

Hardback. Very Good.

Avaliações

Em Mar 21 2009, Killswan disse:
Most of us, I think, have a vague notion that Britain's King Arthur is a product of the dying, perhaps recently stone cold dead (at least in Britain), Western Roman Empire. Professor Valerio Massimo Manfredi's novel THE LAST LEGION (2002) imagines how Arthur might have been the son of Romulus Augustus, the last (western) Roman Emperor. And Manfredi firmly locates the future King Arthur's coming field of operations in southern Scotland and Northern England rather than, say, the earlier more popular Cornwall.

Deposed in 476 by a barbarian Gothic general Odoacer, young Romulus and his tutor Ambrosinus are exiled to Capri and guarded by Gothic warriors. A handful of legionaries loyal to the idea of non-Barbarian Rome, hastily thrown together by troubled, amnesiac Aurelianus Ambrosius Ventidius, aided by a woman warrior who is one of the founders of Venice, free both teen-age emperor and tutor and move together to Hadrian's wall on the border of today's Scotland and England. Pursued by Gothic warriors of Odoacer who had also co-opted a war band of Saxons, the emperor's few followers make contact with veterans of aa long disbanded Roman legion once stationed at Hadrian's wall.

In a decisive battle at the wall, the Romans fight off the Goths and Saxons, aided by veterans of the old legion, decked out in their long obsolete armor. That legion's banner still existed and displayed a red dragon. Romulus's tutor, whom we have long known to be a British Druid, resumes his non-Roman name of Myrdin, soon corrupted by local Britons to Merlin. Romulus, now using the name Pendragon, "son of the Dragon," became King of the Britons. After marrying the Celtic Ygraine, Romulus/Pendragon became father of the future King Arthur. The entire story is narrated by Merlin. At story's end young Arthur is five years old. His name came from "Arcturus," "born under the sign of the bear."

In his lonely wanderings during his captivity in the Emperor Trajan's ancient palace on Capri, young Romulus had found Julius Caesar's sword, the finest ever made. Its name would later be corrupted from a time-blurred Latin inscription on its blade (CAI.IUL.CAES.ENSIS CALIBURNUS) to Excalibur. At the end of his friends' great victory against Goths and Saxons at Mount Badon, young Romulus shouted "No more war! no more blood!" He then walked to a nearby lake, carrying Julius Caesar's mighty sword, "still dripping blood." "He hurled the sword far into the lake. Excalibur "plunged like a meteor into the heart of the moss-covered stone that rose at the center of the lake" (Ch. 37).

The final words of the tale are Merlin's: "Here my story ends. Here, perhaps, a legend is born."

Not a bad preparation for reading this excellent fictional evocation of the last days of the Western Roman Empire and the first days of Medieval Britain would be to watch the 2007 film derived from the novel. Styled, like its original, THE LAST LEGION, this arguably too compressed and simplified film is available in DVD. It stars Colin Firth (Aurelianus), Ben Kingsley (Ambrosinus/Merlin) and 1994 Miss Universe Aishwarya Rai as a warrior maiden serving the Eastern Roman Emperor. There is, indeed, a warrior woman in the novel, but she is Livia, a Roman survivor not an East Indian.

The film is not at all bad.

The novel is great. It successfully shows how the collapsing Empire might have looked to a handful of legionaries and to the post-Roman little people, mainly Celts, among whom they moved. The author is a scholar of the period and has also written a fictional trilogy on Alexander the Great. -OOO-

(Entrar ou Criar uma conta primeiro!)

Você está avaliando o livro como uma obra não o vendedor ou a cópia específica que você comprou!

Detalhes

Livreiro
World of Books Ltd GB (GB)
Nº do estoque do livreiro
GOR001309182
Título
Last Legion
Autor
Manfredi, Valerio Massimo
Formato/Encadernação
Hardback
Estado do livro
Usado - Muito Bom
Quantidade Disponível
4
Encadernação
Capa dura
ISBN 10
0333907698
ISBN 13
9780333907696
Editorial
Macmillan
Local de publicação
London
Esta edição foi publicada pela primeira vez
February 7, 2003

Termos da venda

World of Books Ltd

If you are not completely satisfied with your purchase for any reason, simply email customerservice@worldofbooks.com and we will quickly resolve any issues you may have. If you have any other queries about your order, please email customerservice@worldofbooks.com. Our goal is to deliver to our customers the best possible service and we hope your experience of dealing with us lives up to our promise. If for whatever reason we fail to meet your expectations then please let us know.

Sobre o Vendedor

World of Books Ltd

Avaliação do vendedor:
Este vendedor ganhou uma avaliação de 2 de 5 estrelas de Biblio clientes.
Membro de Biblio desde 2007
GORING BY SEA, West Sussex

Sobre World of Books Ltd

In 2002, World of Books Group was founded on an ethos to do good, protect the planet and support charities by enabling more goods to be reused. Since then, we've grown into to a global company pioneering the circular economy. Today, we drive the circular economy through three re-commerce brands:
- Wob: Through Wob, we sell. We provide affordable, preloved books and media to customers all over the world. A book leaves our collection of over seven million titles and begins a new chapter every two seconds, enabling more goods to be reused.
- Ziffit: Through Ziffit, we buy. We give people around the world the opportunity to contribute to the circular economy, earn money and protect the planet, by trading their unwanted books and media.
- Shopiago: Through Shopiago, we help others. By sharing the technology that has grown World of Books Group into the business it is today, we're helping charities increase revenue and reduce waste through re-commerce.
tracking-