William Stearns Davis
William Stearns Davis was an American educator, historian, and author. He has been cited as one who "contributed to history as a scholarly discipline,. .. [but] was intrigued by the human side of history, which, at the time, was neglected by the discipline." After first experimenting with short stories, he turned while still a college undergraduate to longer forms to relate, from an involved (fictional) character's view, a number of critical turns of history. This faculty for humanizing, even dramatizing, history characterized Davis' later academic and professional writings as well, making them particularly suitable for secondary and higher education during the first half of the twentieth century in a field which, according to one editor, had "lost the freshness and robustness. .. the congeniality" that should mark the study of history. Both Davis' fiction and non-fiction are found in public and academic libraries today.
"God Wills It!" A Tale of the First Crusade.
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A Day in Old Athens; a Picture of Athenian Life
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A Friend of Cæsar: A Tale of the Fall of the Roman Republic. Time, 50-47 B.C.
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A Victor of Salamis
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Belshazzar: A Tale of the Fall of Babylon
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Life on a Mediaeval Barony / A Picture of a Typical Feudal Community in the Thirteenth Century
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The Saint of the Dragon's Dale: A Fantastical Tale
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