
Born in Lisbon in 1810, Alexandre Herculano emerged from a modest upbringing to become one of Portugal’s most influential writers and historians. As a young man he threw himself into the liberal revolts of the 1830s, fleeing the country after the failed uprising and traveling across Europe before returning to serve as a librarian in Porto. Those early experiences of exile and political turbulence shaped his fierce commitment to truth and reform.
Back in Lisbon, Herculano turned his restless energy toward literature, producing novels such as “O Monge de Cister” and pioneering a new, realistic style in Portuguese narrative. He later devoted himself to chronicling the nation’s past, publishing the multi‑volume “História de Portugal” that combined rigorous scholarship with a vivid storytelling voice. Though his outspoken criticism of the clergy and establishment earned him both admiration and controversy, his work laid the foundations for modern Portuguese historiography and continues to inspire readers today.
Language
pt
Duration
~36 minutes (34K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Lisboa: Monteiro & C.ª--Editores Agencia Universal De Publicações Rua Dos Retrozeiros, 75 Typ. da Companhia Nacional Editora 1894
Credits
Produced by Pedro Saborano (produced from scanned images of public domain material from Google Book Search)
Release date
2007-11-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
1869–1914
A Portuguese-born writer remembered for literary biography and criticism, he moved in the world of late 19th-century letters and published studies of major cultural figures. His surviving books suggest a clear interest in history, ideas, and the people who shaped Portuguese literature.
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