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Slovene historical fiction : ウィキペディア英語版 | Slovene historical fiction Slovene historical fiction in form of historical tale (''zgodovinska povest'') or historical novel (''zgodovinski roman'') is besides rural story the central national constitutive genre. ==Epic poem== Slovene historical narratives started with the 500-line epic poem ''Krst pri Savici'' (''The Baptism by the Savica'') by France Prešeren in 1836, dealing with the defeat of the pagan Slovenes by the Christian Slovenes in the Bohinj valley in 772. Only the leader Črtomir remains alive. He finds out his betrothed Bogomila has been baptized and has gone to convent – she just kept the promise to St. Mary if her beloved Črtomir would survive the battle. Now Črtomir is easily persuaded to receive baptism at the Savica waterfall and becomes a Christian priest. Črtomir thematizes the basic Slovene national dilemma whether to stick to their own cultural identity or to accept and adopt the best from more industrious and successful neighbours. Jožef Žemlja’s ''Sedem sinov'' followed 1843, printed in the newly introduced Illyric alphabet with hacheks, to more clearly demonstrate the inclusion of Slovene national epic into the South Slavic and Pan-Slavic movement. Later, narrative in verse was sporadic. In epic poetry, Anton Aškerc (''Primož Trubar: Zgodovinska pesnitev'', 1905, ''Mučeniki: Slike iz naše protireformacije'', 1906) is known for persistent interweaving of historical topics into his epic.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Slovene historical fiction」の詳細全文を読む
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