Characters and story
Alix is stunning, fearless, generous and devoted to just causes. Born in Gaul, separated from his parents and sold into slavery, he is later adopted by a Roman noble contemporary toThe authors
Jacques Martin created the ''Alix'' series as one of his earliest heroes, and he continued solo conception, plot, dialogue and illustration for 50 years, even while developing other series such as '' Lefranc''. Due to failing eyesight and advancing age, since 1998 Martin gradually retired from the series, turning over tasks to various assistants. Rafael Morales became his first assistant, taking charge of the final illustrations with some assistance by Marc Henniquiau, while Martin continued writing the stories and performing the first sketches and layouts. In 2006, Martin turned over the final writing task to François Maingoval, while still conceiving the main storyline in rough draft form. In 2008, Maingoval shifted his attention to a spin-off series (see ''Alix raconte'' below), whileCharacters
* Alix Graccus: the hero of the series in the title role, pure of heart, perpetually sixteen and wise for his years. * Enak: a boy of fourteen, who meets Alix in ''Le sphinx d'or''. Not originally intended as a principal character, he becomes Alix's constant and faithful companion. * Arbacès: sworn enemy of the heroes, this crafty and cruel Greek keeps turning up in their path. *''Alix'' titles
The series first appeared as a serial in the Franco-Belgian comics magazine '' Tintin'' on 16 September 1948. Three more adventures appeared before Les Editions du Lombard (the publishing house responsible for ''Tintin'' magazine) began reissuing them in hardcover book form. Lapsing in 1959, Lombard turned over rights to Casterman (publisher of '' The Adventures of Tintin'') in 1965. After going out of print for several years, the earlier Lombard volumes were also reintroduced to new readers in 1969–1973. As '' Tintin'' magazine declined in sales and popularity, ''Vercingetorix'' (1985) was the last ''Alix'' story to appear in its pages. Thereafter ''Alix'' was only published in book form.''The Adventures of Alix'' by Jacques Martin as sole creator
''The adventures of Alix'' by Jacques Martin with collaborators
''The adventures of Alix'' without Jacques Martin
''Alix'' in English
''Alix'' has seen little translation into English. In 1971 the London publisher Ward Lock & Co issued two titles, ''The Sacred Helmet'' (''La tiare d'Oribal''), and ''The Black Claw'' (''La griffe noire''). These books are now considered relatively rare. Two more titles, ''The Lost Legions'' (''Les légions perdues''), and ''The Altar of Fire'' (''Le dernier Spartiate'') were also projected for publication that year, but never appeared. A reviewer for the '' Times Literary Supplement'' found ''Alix'' singularly lacking in humour compared to '' Asterix'', effectively killing prospects for continued publication in a market not yet accustomed to the wider Franco-Belgian tradition.''Alix'' in other languages
The strip has been translated into several other European languages, such as Portuguese, German, Dutch, Spanish, Greek (10 books) Finnish, Danish, Swedish - at least 9 books, Italian (3 books), English (only 2 books), Icelandic (6 books), Catalan. It was also translated into other languages such as Indonesian (4 books), Vietnamese (1 book) and Chinese (non official version - 2 books). ''Le fils de Spartacus'' has been published in Latin as ''Spartaci Filius''. The name of Alix in Dutch language is ''Alex''Works not in series
* ''L'odyssée d'Alix'', by Jacques Martin (Casterman, 1987).Spin-offs
''Les Voyages d'Alix''
This series depicts the culture and geography of antiquity with illustrations inspired by the adventures of Alix. Printed in full colour on higher quality stock than the comics series, these books aim to educate in a style identical to Jacques Martin's. Alix and Enak can frequently be seen in various settings. At least some of these books have been available in English, for example "Egypt (1)", though they may now be out of print. * ''Rome 1'' (illustrated by Gilles Chaillet) (1996) * ''L'Égypte 1'' (illustrated by Rafael Moralès) (1996) * ''La marine antique 1'' (illustrated by Marc Henniquiau) (1997) * ''La Grèce 1'' (illustrated by Pierre de Broche) (1997) * ''La Grèce 2'' (illustrated by Pierre de Broche) (1998) * ''Rome 2'' (illustrated by Gilles Chaillet) (1999) * ''La marine antique 2'' (illustrated by Marc Henniquiau) (1999) * ''Le costume antique 1'' (illustrated by Jacques Denoël) (1999) * ''L'Égypte 2'' (illustrated by Rafael Moralès) (2000) * ''Le costume antique 2'' (illustrated by Jacques Denoël) (2000) * ''Carthage'' (illustrated by Vincent Hénin) (2000) * ''Athènes'' (illustrated by Laurent Bouhy) (2001) * ''Le costume antique 3'' (illustrated by Jacques Denoël) (2002) * ''Jérusalem'' (illustrated by Vincent Hénin) (2002) * ''Pompéi 1'' (illustrated by Marc Henniquiau) (2002) * ''Persépolis'' (illustrated by Cédric Hevan) (2003) * ''Pétra'' (illustrated by Vincent Hénin) (2003) * ''Les Mayas'' (illustrated by Jean Torton) (2004) * ''Les Étrusques'' (illustrated by Jean Torton) (2004) * ''Les Jeux Olympiques'' (illustrated by Cédric Hervan and Yves Plateau) (2004) * ''Les Mayas 2'' (illustrated by Jean Torton) (2005) * ''Les Aztèques'' (illustrated by Jean Torton) (2005) * ''Lutèce'' (illustrated by Vincent Hénin) (2006) * ''Les Vikings'' (illustrated by Eric Lenaerts) (2006) * ''Les Incas'' (illustrated by Jean Torton) (2006) * ''Les Étrusques 2'' (illustrated by Jacques Denoël) (2007) * ''La Chine'' (illustrated by Erwin Dreze (2008) * ''Alexandre le conquerant 1'' (illustrated by De Wulf, Christophe Simon and De Marck) (2009) * ''L'Egypt 3'' (illustrated by Rafael Morales and Leonardo Palmisano) (2009) * ''Lugdunum'' (illustrated by Gilbert Bouchard) (2009) * ''Orange-Vaison-La-Romaine'' (illustrated by Marco Venanzi and Alex Evang) (2010) * ''Vienna'' (illustrated by Gilbert Bouchard and Benoit Helly) (2011) * ''Nimes - Le Pont du Gard'' (illustrated by Jacques Denoel and Eric Teyssier) (2012) * ''Aquae Sextiae (Aix en Provence)'' (illustrated by Alex Evang, Yves Plateau and Jerome Presti) (2013) * ''Babylone - Mesopotamie'' (illustrated by Jean-Marie Ruffieux) (2013)''Alix raconte''
Each book in this series presents a somewhat fictionalized biography of a famous person of Antiquity in comic strip form. When Alix is a contemporary of the subject, he occasionally appears as a secondary character. The scripts are written by François Maingoval, while the illustration has been done by different artists. The series is not available in English.''Alix Senator''
A spin-off series that started in 2012. It is set in 12 BC when Alix is an older Roman senator, looking after Titus, his son, and Khephren, the son of Enak. This series is more realistic and darker than the original series.Novels
In 2004, 4 novels about Alix were published by Casterman 4, written by Alain Hammerstein (pen name of Alain De Kuyssche) with illustrations by Jean-François Charles. *''Alix l'intrépide'', 2004. (based on album 1: Alix l'Intrépide) *''Le Sortilège de Khorsabad'', 2004. *''L'Ombre de César'', 2004. *''Le Sphinx d'or'', 2004. (based on album 2: The Golden Sphinx)Television
Starting in 1999, an animated television series of 26 episodes was created that aired on France 3.Parodies
* ''Alex l'Intrépide'', by Dupa, in: '' Tintin'' magazine (29 Sept. 1981) * ''Axile'', byAwards
* 1978:In popular culture
In the Belgian Comic Strip Center in Brussels the permanent exhibition brings homage to the pioneers of Belgian comics, among them Jacques Martin (despite being born in France). The room dedicated to his work is designed as a Roman balcony. Alix is among the many Belgian comics characters to jokingly have a Brussels street named after them. Since 2006 the Boulevard Anspach/Anspach Boulevard has aReferences
Sources
External links