Sacred and profane thought in the early middle ages
Tavarnuzze, 2016; bound, pp. 336, col. plates.
(Millennio Medievale. 109).
series: Millennio Medievale
ISBN: 88-8450-704-9
- EAN13: 9788884507044
Languages:
Weight: 1.61 kg
In these essays Peter Dronke looks at some of the relations between sacred and profane ideas and images, and Christian and pagan motifs, particularly in the early Middle Ages. The first two parts of the book dwell on aspects of (in the widest sense) Christian Platonism, the one part focussing on themes, the other on some of the greatest thinkers in the Latin world, from Boethius in the sixth century to Thierry of Chartres in the twelfth. The emphasis throughout is on transformations and syncretisms far more than disjunctions. The final group of essays is concerned with poetic texts, Latin and vernacular, in which non-sacred elements make their way into the sacred, the biblical and the saintly realms. A brief Epilogue glances at early medieval profane poetry outside as well as within Europe