Ranum analyzes the canons of writing history and describes the
lives and achievements of the royal French historiographers. He
examines the manner in which these writers described and, in some
sense, created the glory that surrounded the lives of the nobility,
hoping by so doing to enhance their own glory. Through studying the
careers of these men, the author demonstrates how rhetorical,
ideological, and social beliefs determined the way history was
written.
Originally published in 1980.
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