Category
page 1Biographies about politicians

Cyropaedia
thumb|Xenophon's Cyropaedia, 1803 English edition.
The Cyropaedia, sometimes spelled Cyropedia, is a partly fictional biography of Cyrus the Great, the founder of Persia's Achaemenid Empire. It was written around 370 BC by Xenophon, the Athenian-born soldier, historian, and student of Socrates. The Latinized title Cyropaedia derives from the Greek Kúrou paideía (), meaning The Education of Cyrus. Aspects of it would become a model for medieval writers of the genre mirrors for princes. In turn, the Cyropaedia strongly influenced the most well-known but atypical of these, Machiavelli's The Princ

Fire and Fury
2018 essay by Michael Wolff

Profiles in Courage
book by John F. Kennedy
Trotsky
three-part biography of Leon Trotsky by Isaac Deutscher

Gandhi Before India
book by Ramachandra Guha