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King Alfred the Great
 
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King Alfred the Great (Hardcover)
by Alfred P. Smyth (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars 3 customer reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Product Description
Book Description
The first major study of King Alfred since Plummer's in 1902

Presents a radical new interpretation of Alfred, based on previously unavailable evidence

Warrior, law-giver, and scholar, Alfred the Great is celebrated as one of Britain's most successful and heroic kings. In this, the first biography for almost one hundred years, Professor Smyth explores the life of this remarkable man. His conclusion is controversial; he argues that Asser's Life of Alfred, hitherto the most important source of our knowledge about the king, is a late medieval forgery. This revelation has profound implications for our understanding of the whole of
Anglo-Saxon history.

Synopsis
Warrior, law-giver, and scholar, Alfred the Great was an extraordinarily gifted and highly successful king, pushing back the Vikings to preserve what is now thought of as the heart of England. In this, the first major study of King Alfred since Plummer's biography of 1902, the career of King Alfred is followed chronologically and examined in depth. The author provides a detailed examination of the much-disputed medieval biography of King Alfred, attributed to the king's tutor, Asser. Professor Smyth argues that Asser's Life is a medieval forgery; a revelation with profound implications for our understanding of the whole of Anglo-Saxon history. The book also contains major studies on the writings of this gifted king, on the controversial charters of his reign, and on the origins of the Anglo-Saxon chronicle. Professor Smyth shows the Chronicle to have been much more closely connected with the court of King Alfred than has hitherto been allowed, and suggests a new date for the completion of the earliest Alfredian section of the Chronicle.

The author also provides a fundamental reassessment of Alfred's military and political achievement in his wars against the Vikings, and compares the experiences of the English king with those of his Frankish contemporaries in their struggle with the same enemy on the other side of the English Channel. Professor Smyth's portrait of Alfred rejects the image of a neurotic and invalid king who supposedly remained a pious illiterate till he was almost 40. Instead, we are shown a man of remarkable energy and intelligence who took necessary steps to defend his people from the Norsemen. We are shown too, a king who had been a scholar all his life and who used his great knowledge to bolster the powers of his own kingship, and to overcome his enemies. Jacket illustration: Initial depicting King Alfred taken from the British Library Manuscript Cotton Claudius D.ii, f.8. This sumptuous compilation contains a collection of Anglo-Saxon, Norman, and Angevin law- codes (Liber legum antiquorum regum) which can be precisely dated to 1321. The inclusion of a Latin translation of the Laws of King Alfred indicates the esteem in which Alfred was held as a law-giver in the high Middle Ages.

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Customer Reviews
3 Reviews
5 star: 33%  (1)
4 star: 33%  (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star: 33%  (1)
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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Unreadable, 21 Jun 2004
Whilst there is no doubt that this is a masterful piece of research, this is an extremely difficult book to read. This is not a book for the general reader and as an introduction into King Alfred, I was hugely disappointed.
The central theme of the book is that what little we know of this greatest on English kings comes from sources of which the author clearly has grave doubts. Primary amongst these accounts is the biography by Asser who knew the king personally. It is suggested (at some considerable length) that this is a medieval forgery. So too are many of the charters associated with Alfred as these are argued to have been faked to acquire land through less than honest means. Consequently, I found that I knew less about King Alfred after struggling through the weighty book than before I started on it !!
If you are interested in the syntax of medieval latin, you may enjoy this book. However, if you want to know more about this king who commissioned the Anglo-Saxon chronicles, was a great law maker, a religious person who sought to bring books written in latin to his subjects through his translations into the vernacular, fought of the Viking army and established the origins of the navy, I suggest you look elsewhere. A book for the academic only.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Smyth-Dog, 5 Jul 2005
Smyth-Dog! Yo whacked me out! Superlative man, yo trenched my degree. I'm gonna put bully to...Alfred. That cat's one mean feline king.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Not for the Beginner, 1 Sep 2007
By Dr. John Bromilow (Okehampton, Devon United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is certainly not a book for those wanting an outline (or even a detailed biography) of the life of King Alfred and it is certainly (as has been said) quite difficult to read. However it is a brilliant piece of scholarship and detective work and probably superb for an already knowledgeable student of the period. When you have read the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (in Anglo-Saxon, of course) as well as Asser (in Latin), do read it again!
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