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ANNA COMNENA , daughter of the emperor Alexius I .See also: Comnenus, the first woman historian, was See also: born on the 1st of See also: December 1083
.
She was her See also: father's favourite and was care-fully trained in the study of See also: poetry, science and See also: Greek philosophy
.
But, though learned and studious, she was intriguing and ambitious, and ready to go to any lengths to gratify her longing for power
.
Having marriecl an accomplished See also: young nobleman, Nicephorus See also: Bryennius, she See also: united with the empress See also: Irene in a vain attempt to prevail upon her father during his last illness to disinherit his son and give the See also: crown to her See also: husband
.
Still undeterred, she entered into a conspiracy to depose her See also: brother after his accession; and when her husband refused to join in the enterprise, she exclaimed that " nature had mistaken their sexes, for he ought to have been the woman." The See also: plot being discovered, Anna forfeited her See also: property and See also: fortune, though, by the clemency of her brother, she escaped with her See also: life
.
Shortly afterwards, she retired into a convent and employed her leisure in writing the Alexiad—a See also: history, in Greek, of her father's life and reign (1o81–1118), supplementing the See also: historical See also: work of her husband
.
It is rather a See also: family See also: panegyric than a scientific history, in which the affection of the daughter and the vanity of the author stand out prominently
.
Trifling acts of her father are described at length in exaggerated terms, while little See also: notice is taken of important constitutional matters
.
A determined opponent of the Latin See also: church and an enthusiastic admirer of the
See also: Byzantine See also: empire, Anna Comnena regards the See also: Crusades as a danger both See also: political and religious
.
Her See also: models are See also: Thucydides, See also: Polybius and See also: Xenophon, and her See also: style exhibits the striving after Atticism characteristic of the See also: period, with the result that the language is highly artificial
.
Her chronology especiallyisdefective
.
See also: Editions in See also: Bonn Corpus Scriptorum Hist
.
Byz., by J
.
Schopen and A
.
Reifferscheid (1839–1878), with Du Cange's valuable commentary; and Teubner series, by A
.
Reifferscheid (1884)
.
See also C
.
See also: Krumbacher, Geschichte der byzantinischen Literatur (2nd ed
.
1897) ; C
.
Neumann, Griechische Geschichtschreiber See also: im 12 Jahrhunderte (1888) ; E
.
Oster, Anna Komnena (See also: Rastatt, 1868–1871) ; See also: Gibbon, Decline and
.
Fall, ch
.
48; See also: Finlay, Hist. of See also: Greece, iii. pp
.
53, 128 (1877); P . See also: Adam, Princesses byzantines (1893); See also: Sir Walter See also: Scott, Count Robert of See also: Paris; L. du Sommerard, See also: Anne Comnene
.
.
.
See also: Agnes de See also: France (1907) ; C
.
Diehl, Figures byzantines (1906)
.
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