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Julian (novel)

Julian is a 1964 novel by Gore Vidal, a work of historical fiction written primarily in the first person dealing with the life of the Roman emperor Flavius Claudius Julianus (known to Christians as Julian the Apostate), who reigned from 360 to 363 A.D.

Julian
Cover of the first edition
AuthorGore Vidal
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreHistorical novel
PublisherLittle, Brown & Company
Publication date
June 8, 1964[1]
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
OCLC53289864
813/.54 22
LC ClassPS3543.I26 J8 2003

Novel edit

The story of the novel begins in March of AD 380, nearly 20 years after the death of Julian. It starts as the text of a series of letters between Libanius and Priscus of Epirus, two confidants of Julian. In their various letters they discuss their lives and in particular the recent events involving an imperial edict of Theodosius involving the Nicene Creed of Christianity. In his first letter to Priscus, Libanius proposes to write a biography of Julian. Eventually Priscus agrees to send a manuscript written by Julian himself to Libanius along with his own comments written in the margins.

The rest of the novel is then presented as the manuscript of Julian in its original form including instructions to the eventual editor and publisher. The marginal notes of Priscus are incorporated into Julian's narrative where he feels fit to comment on or expand certain parts of the narrative. These comments are then often followed by the comments of Libanius on both the narrative and the comments of Priscus. Frequently they offer a different and sometimes contradictory hindsight interpretation of events and people than Julian expresses in his manuscript.

The narrative of Julian presents his life story but is very self-reflective in parts. He attempts to be critical of his own shortcomings as well as trying to reconstruct his thoughts and emotions at various points in his life and public career. He frequently incorporates his own observations on everything from human nature to religion, philosophy, and government.

Plot summary edit

Julian was the last direct relative of Constantine the Great to take up the purple, his father being Constantine's half-brother. As emperor, he attempted to destroy the influence of the Christian church. His goals were to bring back firstly the worship of the old Roman pantheon, secondly other religions including Judaism (he attempts to restore the Jewish Temple), and thirdly - with special emphasis upon the growing crisis on Rome's frontiers - Mithraism, a mystery religion that had been popular among Roman soldiers.

The book takes the form of the correspondence between two Hellenistic pagans, Libanius, who is considering writing a biography of Julian, and Priscus, who possesses Julian's personal memoir. Christianity has, by this stage, become the official religion of the Roman Empire (as decreed by the emperor Theodosius), with rioting and inquisition causing extreme violence between traditionalists and Christians, and even between Christian sects. Only thirty years after the novel took place, the city of Rome would be sacked by the Goths.

The memoir relates Julian's life from the time so many members of his family were purged by his cousin, the emperor Constantius II (whom he succeeded on the throne), his "exile" to libraries as a child, and his subsequent negative childhood experiences with Christian hypocrisy and conflict over dogma (see Arianism). As he matures, a rift forms between Julian and his disturbed half-brother Constantius Gallus, who is made Caesar (heir to the purple) by Constantius II; Julian claims, for his safety, to have no interest but philosophy, so he undertakes a journey to Athens to study under the city's greatest teachers. Here, he first sees Libanius, the book's narrator, and has an affair with a female philosopher, Macrina. He also comes to know some of the early Church Fathers in their formative years, including the agreeable Basil of Caesarea and the abrasive and dishonest Gregory of Nazianzus. Julian becomes a lector, a minor office in the Christian church, but he continues to learn about the traditional religions: he studies Neoplatonism in Asia Minor under Aedesius, and is initiated into the Eleusinian Mysteries in Athens (which he would later try to restore).

Julian is eventually made Caesar in place of Gallus, who was executed by Constantius II for cruelty, debauchery, and to satisfy Constantius's legendary insecurity and paranoia. This leaves Julian the successor to Constantius II, and he is given (at first nominal) command of Gaul, under attack by the Alamanni. Subsequently, Julian seizes hands-on military and administrative control from his 'advisors,' and, against expectations, experiences overwhelming military success over the Germans at Strasbourg. Upon the death of Helena, Julian's wife and Constantius's sister, and in the face of Constantius's ever-increasing manic paranoia, Julian undertakes a short rebellion against Constantius, which ends bloodlessly, with Constantius's natural death during the journey to confront Julian, and Julian's accession to the title of Augustus.

Julian's early reign is successful, with the removal from office of court eunuchs, whose true role Julian sees as being to drag on the state coffers and to isolate the emperors from real-world concerns. He also undertakes attempts to prevent the spread of Christianity; referring to the religion throughout the novel as 'back-country' and a 'death-cult' (and churches as 'charnel-houses', for their reverence of relics), Julian sees the best means to do this as to block Christians from teaching classical literature, thus relegating their religion to non-intellectual audiences and thwarting attempts by Christians to develop the sophisticated rhetoric and intellectualism of traditional Roman and Hellenistic religions. Here, Julian's headstrong nature begins to affect his ability to know his own capabilities, evident in several clashes with the Trinitarian clergy and with advisors. Nonetheless, Julian takes the opportunity to outline his arguments against Christianity, and to lay out his vision for reforming and restoring Roman civic life. His reforms are under way when, in spite of his own faith in prophecy, Julian undertakes an ill-omened campaign to reclaim Roman Mesopotamia from the Sassanid Empire.

This marks a significant turning-point in the novel, as it is the end of Julian's memoir. The rest of the novel consists of field dispatches and diary entries detailing Julian's campaign, with commentary by Priscus and Libanius's reflections. Initially, Julian is extremely successful (in spite of his relying on Xenophon's dated Anabasis for geographic details of the region), reaching Ctesiphon and defeating the Persian emperor in several decisive battles. However, after Persian scorched-earth tactics leave Julian's army with no food or water, it becomes apparent that the Christian officers' loyalty is in question, and that a plot may be afoot to kill Julian. Priscus recounts a short conversation with another non-Christian advisor during the campaign, in which he is told simply, 'we're not safe'. Indeed, Julian's dispatches begin to show delusion on the part of the emperor, and in spite of his steadily eroding grasp of reality and his own limitations, he presses on until a near mutiny of his soldiers. Not long after, during the return to Roman territory, Julian rushes to fight off a Persian attack on the line, eschewing his armor, since his aide Callistus has not repaired its broken straps. Julian returns to camp mortally wounded, and in spite of the efforts of his physician and friend Oribasius, he dies without picking a successor. Here, Vidal's narrative departs slightly from the known story of Julian, as it becomes apparent in the novel that Julian was wounded by a Roman spear. Upon the removal of Julian's body, Priscus secretly rifles through Julian's belongings, taking Julian's memoir and diary for himself and saving them from censorship. The Christian officers win the debate over whom to elevate to the title of Augustus, settling on the simple-minded and drunken Jovian. The campaign ends in disaster, and Jovian cedes significant portions of Rome's eastern territory to the Sassanid Empire.

The rest of the novel consists of the continuing correspondence of Libanius and Priscus; Libanius asks Priscus what he knows about Julian's death, himself suspecting that there was always a plot among the Christian officers to kill Julian. Priscus responds (with the assurance that his role as the source of such information would be kept anonymous) that, upon visiting Callistus years later, Priscus asked whether Callistus, who rode into battle with Julian on the day of his death, saw who killed the emperor. Callistus's originally one-dimensional and vague tale began to take on more detail, and when Priscus again asked whether Callistus knows the killer's identity, Callistus responded that he did, of course: 'it was I who killed the Emperor Julian'. Callistus recounted breaking the straps on Julian's armor before the fatal engagement, and personally stabbing Julian with his spear. Priscus asked how Callistus could have hated Julian, his benefactor. The Christian Callistus responded, chillingly, that he did not hate Julian, but admired him, and that 'every day [Callistus] pray[s]' for Julian's soul. Priscus closes the anecdote by begging Libanius to keep his name out of any published account of Julian's death, citing Callistus's powerful co-conspirators from the army and Theodosius's well-documented brutality, and Libanius's worst fears about Julian's death are confirmed.

The novel ends with Libanius's sending a letter to the emperor Theodosius seeking permission to publish Julian's memoir; it is denied. Lamenting his ill health, Theodosius's politically motivated proscription of traditional religion, and the end of intellectual culture and its replacement by widespread religious violence and intolerance, Libanius meets John Chrysostom, his former best student, giving a sermon at a Christian church. Libanius finally realizes that traditional religion is defeated, seeing as even the best and brightest of his students have enthusiastically adopted Christianity. Irritated by John's solemn triumph, Libanius calls Christianity a death-cult, and in response, John Chrysostom morbidly implies that Christianity embraces the coming death of the classical world. By extension, though somewhat more vaguely, John claims that he awaits the coming apocalypse. In closing, Libanius writes, prophetically, that he hopes the coming collapse of reason and the Roman world will be only temporary, likening the dying of the Empire to that of his oil lamp, and expresses the hope that reason and 'man's love of light' would one day bring back the prosperity, stability, and intellectualism of the pre-Christian empire.

Major themes edit

Vidal's own introduction notes that it deals with the changes to Christianity wrought by Constantine and his successors. Vidal's view is that the promotion of Christianity by Constantine, and the creation of an orthodoxy, conflicting schools of thought (many later denounced as heresy), was driven by Constantine's political needs, rather than a deeply held belief, and that this policy was continued by his dynastic successors.

Like other historical novels by Vidal, the novel is based on extensive use of contemporary sources, including Julian's own works, and much of the latter part of the book obviously uses Ammianus Marcellinus (who witnessed Julian's death) and Libanius, both of whom were friends of Julian and appear as characters in the novel. It also reflects the opinion of Julian held by Edward Gibbon in his History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.

The death of Julian, and the reasons for it, are based on the opinion of Libanius and Vidal's interpretation of a very short but vital lacuna in Ammianus' history as due to active censorship rather than the ravages of time.

Historical accuracy edit

Julian has been criticized by historian Robert Browning for crediting its subject with sexual exploits for which there is no evidence. Browning notes in addition that in the book, "Julian is less surely and clearly delineated in his relation to political power or to God than he is in relation to his fellow men or to his own inner life."[2]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Books Today". The New York Times: 27. June 8, 1964.
  2. ^ Browning, Robert (1975). The Emperor Julian. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. p. 235. ISBN 0-297-77029-2.

External links edit

Julian's written works in translation on-line

  • Against the Galileans
  • Two Orations
  • "The Caesars" aka "Symposium" aka "Kronia"

julian, novel, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, julian, novel, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jsto. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Julian novel news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message Julian is a 1964 novel by Gore Vidal a work of historical fiction written primarily in the first person dealing with the life of the Roman emperor Flavius Claudius Julianus known to Christians as Julian the Apostate who reigned from 360 to 363 A D JulianCover of the first editionAuthorGore VidalCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreHistorical novelPublisherLittle Brown amp CompanyPublication dateJune 8 1964 1 Media typePrint Hardback amp Paperback OCLC53289864Dewey Decimal813 54 22LC ClassPS3543 I26 J8 2003 Contents 1 Novel 1 1 Plot summary 2 Major themes 3 Historical accuracy 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksNovel editThe story of the novel begins in March of AD 380 nearly 20 years after the death of Julian It starts as the text of a series of letters between Libanius and Priscus of Epirus two confidants of Julian In their various letters they discuss their lives and in particular the recent events involving an imperial edict of Theodosius involving the Nicene Creed of Christianity In his first letter to Priscus Libanius proposes to write a biography of Julian Eventually Priscus agrees to send a manuscript written by Julian himself to Libanius along with his own comments written in the margins The rest of the novel is then presented as the manuscript of Julian in its original form including instructions to the eventual editor and publisher The marginal notes of Priscus are incorporated into Julian s narrative where he feels fit to comment on or expand certain parts of the narrative These comments are then often followed by the comments of Libanius on both the narrative and the comments of Priscus Frequently they offer a different and sometimes contradictory hindsight interpretation of events and people than Julian expresses in his manuscript The narrative of Julian presents his life story but is very self reflective in parts He attempts to be critical of his own shortcomings as well as trying to reconstruct his thoughts and emotions at various points in his life and public career He frequently incorporates his own observations on everything from human nature to religion philosophy and government Plot summary edit Julian was the last direct relative of Constantine the Great to take up the purple his father being Constantine s half brother As emperor he attempted to destroy the influence of the Christian church His goals were to bring back firstly the worship of the old Roman pantheon secondly other religions including Judaism he attempts to restore the Jewish Temple and thirdly with special emphasis upon the growing crisis on Rome s frontiers Mithraism a mystery religion that had been popular among Roman soldiers The book takes the form of the correspondence between two Hellenistic pagans Libanius who is considering writing a biography of Julian and Priscus who possesses Julian s personal memoir Christianity has by this stage become the official religion of the Roman Empire as decreed by the emperor Theodosius with rioting and inquisition causing extreme violence between traditionalists and Christians and even between Christian sects Only thirty years after the novel took place the city of Rome would be sacked by the Goths The memoir relates Julian s life from the time so many members of his family were purged by his cousin the emperor Constantius II whom he succeeded on the throne his exile to libraries as a child and his subsequent negative childhood experiences with Christian hypocrisy and conflict over dogma see Arianism As he matures a rift forms between Julian and his disturbed half brother Constantius Gallus who is made Caesar heir to the purple by Constantius II Julian claims for his safety to have no interest but philosophy so he undertakes a journey to Athens to study under the city s greatest teachers Here he first sees Libanius the book s narrator and has an affair with a female philosopher Macrina He also comes to know some of the early Church Fathers in their formative years including the agreeable Basil of Caesarea and the abrasive and dishonest Gregory of Nazianzus Julian becomes a lector a minor office in the Christian church but he continues to learn about the traditional religions he studies Neoplatonism in Asia Minor under Aedesius and is initiated into the Eleusinian Mysteries in Athens which he would later try to restore Julian is eventually made Caesar in place of Gallus who was executed by Constantius II for cruelty debauchery and to satisfy Constantius s legendary insecurity and paranoia This leaves Julian the successor to Constantius II and he is given at first nominal command of Gaul under attack by the Alamanni Subsequently Julian seizes hands on military and administrative control from his advisors and against expectations experiences overwhelming military success over the Germans at Strasbourg Upon the death of Helena Julian s wife and Constantius s sister and in the face of Constantius s ever increasing manic paranoia Julian undertakes a short rebellion against Constantius which ends bloodlessly with Constantius s natural death during the journey to confront Julian and Julian s accession to the title of Augustus Julian s early reign is successful with the removal from office of court eunuchs whose true role Julian sees as being to drag on the state coffers and to isolate the emperors from real world concerns He also undertakes attempts to prevent the spread of Christianity referring to the religion throughout the novel as back country and a death cult and churches as charnel houses for their reverence of relics Julian sees the best means to do this as to block Christians from teaching classical literature thus relegating their religion to non intellectual audiences and thwarting attempts by Christians to develop the sophisticated rhetoric and intellectualism of traditional Roman and Hellenistic religions Here Julian s headstrong nature begins to affect his ability to know his own capabilities evident in several clashes with the Trinitarian clergy and with advisors Nonetheless Julian takes the opportunity to outline his arguments against Christianity and to lay out his vision for reforming and restoring Roman civic life His reforms are under way when in spite of his own faith in prophecy Julian undertakes an ill omened campaign to reclaim Roman Mesopotamia from the Sassanid Empire This marks a significant turning point in the novel as it is the end of Julian s memoir The rest of the novel consists of field dispatches and diary entries detailing Julian s campaign with commentary by Priscus and Libanius s reflections Initially Julian is extremely successful in spite of his relying on Xenophon s dated Anabasis for geographic details of the region reaching Ctesiphon and defeating the Persian emperor in several decisive battles However after Persian scorched earth tactics leave Julian s army with no food or water it becomes apparent that the Christian officers loyalty is in question and that a plot may be afoot to kill Julian Priscus recounts a short conversation with another non Christian advisor during the campaign in which he is told simply we re not safe Indeed Julian s dispatches begin to show delusion on the part of the emperor and in spite of his steadily eroding grasp of reality and his own limitations he presses on until a near mutiny of his soldiers Not long after during the return to Roman territory Julian rushes to fight off a Persian attack on the line eschewing his armor since his aide Callistus has not repaired its broken straps Julian returns to camp mortally wounded and in spite of the efforts of his physician and friend Oribasius he dies without picking a successor Here Vidal s narrative departs slightly from the known story of Julian as it becomes apparent in the novel that Julian was wounded by a Roman spear Upon the removal of Julian s body Priscus secretly rifles through Julian s belongings taking Julian s memoir and diary for himself and saving them from censorship The Christian officers win the debate over whom to elevate to the title of Augustus settling on the simple minded and drunken Jovian The campaign ends in disaster and Jovian cedes significant portions of Rome s eastern territory to the Sassanid Empire The rest of the novel consists of the continuing correspondence of Libanius and Priscus Libanius asks Priscus what he knows about Julian s death himself suspecting that there was always a plot among the Christian officers to kill Julian Priscus responds with the assurance that his role as the source of such information would be kept anonymous that upon visiting Callistus years later Priscus asked whether Callistus who rode into battle with Julian on the day of his death saw who killed the emperor Callistus s originally one dimensional and vague tale began to take on more detail and when Priscus again asked whether Callistus knows the killer s identity Callistus responded that he did of course it was I who killed the Emperor Julian Callistus recounted breaking the straps on Julian s armor before the fatal engagement and personally stabbing Julian with his spear Priscus asked how Callistus could have hated Julian his benefactor The Christian Callistus responded chillingly that he did not hate Julian but admired him and that every day Callistus pray s for Julian s soul Priscus closes the anecdote by begging Libanius to keep his name out of any published account of Julian s death citing Callistus s powerful co conspirators from the army and Theodosius s well documented brutality and Libanius s worst fears about Julian s death are confirmed The novel ends with Libanius s sending a letter to the emperor Theodosius seeking permission to publish Julian s memoir it is denied Lamenting his ill health Theodosius s politically motivated proscription of traditional religion and the end of intellectual culture and its replacement by widespread religious violence and intolerance Libanius meets John Chrysostom his former best student giving a sermon at a Christian church Libanius finally realizes that traditional religion is defeated seeing as even the best and brightest of his students have enthusiastically adopted Christianity Irritated by John s solemn triumph Libanius calls Christianity a death cult and in response John Chrysostom morbidly implies that Christianity embraces the coming death of the classical world By extension though somewhat more vaguely John claims that he awaits the coming apocalypse In closing Libanius writes prophetically that he hopes the coming collapse of reason and the Roman world will be only temporary likening the dying of the Empire to that of his oil lamp and expresses the hope that reason and man s love of light would one day bring back the prosperity stability and intellectualism of the pre Christian empire Major themes editVidal s own introduction notes that it deals with the changes to Christianity wrought by Constantine and his successors Vidal s view is that the promotion of Christianity by Constantine and the creation of an orthodoxy conflicting schools of thought many later denounced as heresy was driven by Constantine s political needs rather than a deeply held belief and that this policy was continued by his dynastic successors Like other historical novels by Vidal the novel is based on extensive use of contemporary sources including Julian s own works and much of the latter part of the book obviously uses Ammianus Marcellinus who witnessed Julian s death and Libanius both of whom were friends of Julian and appear as characters in the novel It also reflects the opinion of Julian held by Edward Gibbon in his History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire The death of Julian and the reasons for it are based on the opinion of Libanius and Vidal s interpretation of a very short but vital lacuna in Ammianus history as due to active censorship rather than the ravages of time Historical accuracy editJulian has been criticized by historian Robert Browning for crediting its subject with sexual exploits for which there is no evidence Browning notes in addition that in the book Julian is less surely and clearly delineated in his relation to political power or to God than he is in relation to his fellow men or to his own inner life 2 See also edit nbsp Novels portal Julian emperor Biographical entry Mithraism Neoplatonism Gore Vidal Creation Vidal s novel that covers the development of other religions and philosophies from Persia to China during the 5th century BCE and the history of the conflict between Greece and Persia Julian s written works in translation Misopogon Beard Hater a satire upon himselfReferences edit Books Today The New York Times 27 June 8 1964 Browning Robert 1975 The Emperor Julian London Weidenfeld and Nicolson p 235 ISBN 0 297 77029 2 External links editJulian s written works in translation on line Against the Galileans Two Orations The Caesars aka Symposium aka Kronia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Julian novel amp oldid 1206447928, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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