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Keith C. Cameron, “Suetonius, Henri de
Valois, and the Art of Political Biography,” IJCT
2 (1995-1996), pp. 284-298.
During the closing years of his reign Henri II was the object of
a sustained and bitter polemical attack from his adversaries, especially
those who supported the League and Guise family. Amongst the numerous
pamphlets appeared a number of “biographies” of Henri
which sought to destroy his credibility as King. This article examines
briefly the nature of the biography as a form of history in sixteenth-century
France, replaces the biographies in their polemical context and
examines the possibility of their having been written by authors
from the English College in Rheims or by persons who had a similar
training. It then goes on to establish parallels between their structure
and content and that of the Lives of the Caesars by Suetonius
and shows how the French polemicists were intent on discrediting
Henri often at the expense of inventing “crimes.” The
article concludes that the rhetorical structure of such works owes
a great deal to the Suetonian model and that they establish in Early
Modern Europe a tradition of “character assassination”
as a powerful element in political and polemical biographies.
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