The Death of Alexander the Great: Rumour and Propaganda

Classical Quarterly 21 (01):112- (1971)
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Abstract

Propaganda and history are often inseparable. Most governments are in a position to control the dissemination of evidence, and if an event is embarrassing or damaging, the relevant evidence is certain to be distorted or withheld. Moreover the writers of history, however innocent their motives, cannot disregard the official apologia of their rulers. One notes with interest that the learned authors of the official Soviet history of the world portray the invasion of eastern Poland on 17 September 1939 as a crusade of liberation. Of course it might be true that the people liberated by the Red Army were glad to be rid of ‘the arbitrary despotism of the Polish Pans’ and that in the subsequent elections there was absolute freedom of choice and overwhelming support for union with the Ukraine, but the fact remains that it was impossible for membersof the Moscow Academy to contradict their government's justification of the invasion

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References found in this work

Hazarapatiš.P. J. Junge - 1940 - Klio 33 (1-4):13-38.
V. ύπομνηματισμοί.Ulrich Wilcken - 1894 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 53 (1-4):80-126.
“eumenes Of- Cardia,”.H. D. Westlake - 1954 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 37 (1):309-327.

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