Vergil in the Middle Ages

Front Cover
Princeton University Press, Jan 12, 1997 - History - 376 pages

From its first complete Italian printing in 1872 up to the present day, Domenico Comparetti's Vergil in the Middle Ages has been acknowledged as a masterpiece, regarded by some critics as "a true and proper history of European consciousness from antiquity to Dante." Treating Vergil's poetry as a foundation of Latin European identity, Comparetti seeks to give a complete history of the medieval conception of the preeminent poet. Scholars of the time had transformed Vergil into a sage and a seer, a type of universal philosopher--even a Christian poet and a guide of a Christian poet. In the mid-twelfth century, there surfaced legends that converted Vergil into a magician, endowing him with supernatural powers. Comparetti explores the ongoing interest in Vergil's poetry as it appeared in popular folklore and legends as well as in medieval classical scholarship. This great synthesizing work, which has been unavailable for over twenty years, is now back in print, based on E.F.M. Benecke's 1895 translation of the Italian second edition.


Comparetti begins with the period in which Vergil lived and goes on to evaluate how the later images, particularly the legends, of Vergil coincide with the more scholarly accounts of his life. The result is a grand sweep of literary history from the first century B.C.E. through the end of the Middle Ages, with implications for the nineteenth century and the rise of Italian nationalism.

From inside the book

Contents

CHAPTER I
3
CHAPTER II
15
CHAPTER III
24
CHAPTER IV
34
CHAPTER V
50
CHAPTER VI
75
CHAPTER VII
96
CHAPTER VIII
104
CHAPTER XV
210
CHAPTER XVI
232
THE VERGIL OF POPULAR LEGEND
239
CHAPTER II
257
CHAPTER III
264
CHAPTER IV
290
CHAPTER V
295
CHAPTER VI
302

CHAPTER IX
119
CHAPTER X
135
CHAPTER XI
156
CHAPTER XII
166
CHAPTER XIII
183
CHAPTER XIV
195
CHAPTER VII
309
CHAPTER VIII
325
CHAPTER IX
340
CHAPTER X
358
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1997)

Domenico Comparetti (1835-1927) was a professor of French literature at the University of Florence. He ranks with Auerbach and Curtius as one of the great synthesizing scholars of classical literature and its survival in popular and learned traditions. Jan M. Ziolkowski is Professor of Medieval Latin and of Comparative Literature at Harvard University.