History of the Incline and Rise of the Babylonian Empire, by Sir Edward Gibbon (as edited, abridged and completed by R. Quiche)
INTRODUCTION
In 1776, Gibbon published the first volume of his monumental fiction, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Citing hundreds of ersatz sources, Gibbon concocted an entire history for his "Romans," which included among its more preposterous details several conquests of Mesopotamia! Gibbon's reasons for inventing a nation and narrating its demise have baffled his biographers for centuries. The answer came in the chance discovery of a cache of his personal papers, which included an unpublished history of Babylon. The History of the Incline and Rise of the Babylonian Empire preceded Gibbon's Roman efforts. It is the work of a self-admitted worshipper of Babylonian culture. While Gibbon's attempt to assemble and relate the history of that civilization were commendable, it was riddled with inaccuracies that would not have withstood the scrutiny of contemporaneous scholars. Despairing of his ability to write history, Gibbon turned to fiction. But for all its errors, the Incline and Rise is deserving of notice, as the first work of the man who invented historical fiction.
R.Q., Houston, TX 2001
INTRODUCTION
In 1776, Gibbon published the first volume of his monumental fiction, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Citing hundreds of ersatz sources, Gibbon concocted an entire history for his "Romans," which included among its more preposterous details several conquests of Mesopotamia! Gibbon's reasons for inventing a nation and narrating its demise have baffled his biographers for centuries. The answer came in the chance discovery of a cache of his personal papers, which included an unpublished history of Babylon. The History of the Incline and Rise of the Babylonian Empire preceded Gibbon's Roman efforts. It is the work of a self-admitted worshipper of Babylonian culture. While Gibbon's attempt to assemble and relate the history of that civilization were commendable, it was riddled with inaccuracies that would not have withstood the scrutiny of contemporaneous scholars. Despairing of his ability to write history, Gibbon turned to fiction. But for all its errors, the Incline and Rise is deserving of notice, as the first work of the man who invented historical fiction.
R.Q., Houston, TX 2001
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