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Early medieval glosses on Prudentius' Psychomachia : the Weitz tradition
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ISBN: 9004138048 9786610915019 9047405161 1280915013 1429407212 9781429407212 9789004138049 9781280915017 6610915016 9789047405160 Year: 2004 Volume: 31 Publisher: Leiden ; Boston : Brill,

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Abstract

This book elucidates the significance of glosses on Prudentius' Psychomachia in the German or Weitz manuscript tradition. It redirects attention away from the philological concerns of conventional scholarship toward those of mainstream Carolingian and Ottonian intellectual history.


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Glossae aevi carolini in libros I-II Martiani Capellae De nuptiis philologiae et mercurii
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ISBN: 9782503534534 2503534538 Year: 2010 Volume: 237 Publisher: Turnhout : Brepols,

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Carolingian scholarship and Martianus Capella : ninth-century commentary, traditions on De nuptiis in context
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ISBN: 9782503531786 2503531784 9782503539492 Year: 2011 Volume: 12 Publisher: Turnhout Brepols

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It is well known that the Carolingian royal family inspired and promoted a cultural revival of great consequence. The courts of Charlemagne and his successors welcomed lively gatherings of scholars who avidly pursued knowledge and learning, while education became a booming business in the great monastic centres, which were under the protection of the royal family. Scholarly emphasis was placed upon Latin language, religion, and liturgy, but the works of classical and late antique authors were collected, studied, and commented upon with similar zeal. A text that was read by ninth-century scholars with an almost unrivalled enthusiasm is Martianus Capella’s De nuptiis Philologiae et Mercurii, a late antique encyclopedia of the seven liberal arts embedded within a mythological framework of the marriage between Philology (learning) and Mercury (eloquence). Several ninth-century commentary traditions testify to the work’s popularity in the ninth century. Martianus’s text treats a wide range of secular subjects, including mythology, the movement of the heavens, numerical speculation, and the ancient tradition on each of the seven liberal arts. De nuptiis and its exceptionally rich commentary traditions provide the focus of this volume, which addresses both the textual material found in the margins of De nuptiis manuscripts, and the broader intellectual context of commentary traditions on ancient secular texts in the early medieval world.

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