For the English speaking reader of today, Ranke is surprisingly
inaccessible; indeed, he has become something of a patron saint, more
praised than read. Now all his major works have been translated, while
almost none of his letters, notes, or essays, so important in getting an
informal appraisal of his craft of history, is in English. Many of his
of books, whether in German or in English, are no longer in print, and
the modern reader is less likely to bear up with the four or six volume
works which are. Thus the purpose of this anthology is to bring
attention to some of the riches which a reader might find in a more
extended study of Ranke's histories. Its emphasis is on Ranke as an
historian, with translations of essays and addresses which lay down his
program for research, politics, and the relationship between and
historian's values and his work. It also attempts to give some sense of
Ranke's literary skill, by including examples of his historical
portraiture from his History of the Popes, History of France, and
History of the Reformation. Finally, a selection of letters and brief
reflections culled from his works and notes tries to recapture the man,
whose own inner development joined with the tendencies of his age to
make him a world-historical figure in Ranke's own sense of the word.