
Petar Krešimir
A biographical and historical narrative of King Petar Krešimir IV: from the strengthening of the Croatian state and Church to political tensions and sea battles. It reads like a living lesson of the Middle Ages. First edition.
Petar Krešimir (1932) presents a dynamic prose portrait of one of the key Croatian rulers of the 11th century. The author combines reliable historical data and narrative nerve: instead of a dry series of dates, we get a scene – a court council, messengers from the Adriatic, a dispute over church discipline, tension on the borders.
Petar Krešimir IV. emerges as a ruler who builds authority in a complex network of Dalmatian cities, nobility and church reforms, and the sea is both his path and a threat. Deželić’s style is clear and picturesque: the dialogues are measuredly dosed, descriptions of landscapes and coasts underline political decisions, and episodes are tied into a clear arc – rise, temptations, consequences.
The book is written as a “living history”: the reader follows how decisions are made about estates, how negotiations are held with cities and neighbors, how rebellions are suppressed and order is maintained. Church themes (reforms, monasteries, bishoprics) are not footnotes, but the engine of politics, so the novel/biography beautifully shows how the spiritual and secular spheres were intertwined. Deželić remains measured: he does not fall into romantic idealization, but gives the character of the king solidity and human measure.
Ideal for readers who want historical prose that can be read in one breath, while respecting the facts: high school students and students as an introduction to the period, and lovers of domestic historiographic prose who are looking for clarity and the atmosphere of Dalmatia and the hinterland in the 11th century.
One copy is available
- Stains on cover
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