Difference between revisions of "Quo Vadis? (1895 Sienkiewicz), novel"

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[[Category:Polish language]]
[[Category:Literature|1895 Sienkiewicz]]
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[[Category:Novels|1895 Sienkiewicz]]
[[Category:Christian origins (subject)]]
[[Category:Polish language|1895 Sienkiewicz]]
[[Category:Nero (subject)]]
[[Category:Made in the 1890s|1895 Sienkiewicz]]
[[Category:Christian origins (subject)|1895 Sienkiewicz]]
[[Category:Nero (subject)|1895 Sienkiewicz]]

Revision as of 17:30, 23 November 2009

Quo Vadis? (1895) is a novel by Henryk Sienkiewicz.

Abstract

“A Narrative of the Time of Nero.” Mature product of eastern-European neo-Christianism offers a broad picture of Roman life, bringing into salient contrast the licentiousness of Paganism and the spiritual beauty of Christianity. Especially remarkable are the chapters describing the great fire and the scenes in the amphitheatre. Its success contributed significantly to Sienkiewicz’s Nobel Prize for Literature in 1905.

Editions and translations

First published in Polish (1895). Translated in more than 40 languages. Inspired, directly or indirectly, an astounding amount of stage productions, films, operas, and works of art.

External links