Antonio de Guevara

Antonio de Guevara, 16th century portrait (cropped)

Antonio de Guevara (c. 1481 – 3 April 1545) was a Spanish bishop and author. In 1527 he was named royal chronicler to Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor. His first book Libro áureo first appeared in pirated editions the following year.[1] This pseudo-historical book of incidents and letters from the life of Marcus Aurelius (known in a later expanded edition as Relox des principes) was translated into nearly every language of Europe, including Russian, Swedish, Hungarian, Polish, Armenian, and Romanian.[2] The popularity of Guevara’s book led scholar and translator Méric Casaubon to remark that no book besides the Bible was so often translated as Guevara’s Relox de principes, or Dial of Princes.[3] Besides his book of Marcus Aurelius, Guevara wrote eight other books, some of which continued to be translated and republished in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

  1. ^ Jones, Joseph R. (1975). Antonio de Guevara. Boston: Twayne Publishers World Authors Series. p. 11.
  2. ^ Rivero, Horacio Chiong (2004). The Rise of Pseudo-Historical Fiction: Fray Antonio de Guevara's Novelizations. Peter Lang. p. 1.
  3. ^ Febvre, Lucien (2010). The coming of the book : the impact of printing, 1450-1800. Henri-Jean Martin, Geoffrey Nowell-Smith, David Wootton. London. p. 274. ISBN 978-1-84467-634-7. OCLC 501976708.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

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