Search results for "Dungal"

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Lucretius Franco-Hibernicus: Dicuil’s Liber de Astronomia and the Carolingian Reception of De Rerum Natura

2020

Abstract Since its coinage in the nineteenth century, the concept of Carolingian renaissance has been primarily based on the revival of classical texts promoted by Charlemagne and his successors. Among the positive consequences of Carolingian classicism is the careful—if discreet—preservation of the text of Lucretius’s De Rerum Natura, which survives in three valuable ninth-century manuscripts. Whereas rigorous philological studies of these manuscripts have been offered, little attention has been paid to their role in, and connection with, the reception of Lucretius in ninth-century literature. It has been generally assumed that for the Carolingians the DRN was essentially a source for gram…

Hiberno-Latin literatureDichotomymedia_common.quotation_subjectReception theoryRhetorical criticismSettore L-FIL-LET/04 - Lingua E Letteratura Latinareception studieDicuilmanuscript studieArgumentLucretiuReading (process)DungalContent (Freudian dream analysis)media_commonLiteraturemedieval studiebusiness.industryPhilosophyDe Rerum NaturaCodex OblonguastronomyintertextualityPhilologyCarolingian literature and sciencebusinessClassicismIllinois Classical Studies
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Lucrezio e Carlo Magno. A proposito dell’epistola di Dungal sulle eclissi (MGH Epistolae IV Karolini aevi II, pp. 570-578)

2021

It is generally assumed that Lucretius’ De Rerum Natura disappeared with the end of antiquity and did not reappear until Poggio Bracciolini’s rediscovery (1417). Yet, the oldest and most valuable manuscripts of DRN were copied in the Carolingian age and reflect a high degree of attention to Lucretius’ text and its content. In the present paper, I argue that by studying more carefully the origin and diffusion of Lucretian manuscripts in Carolingian Europe, it is possible to detect an almost unrecognized connection between textual tradition, grammatical erudition, and literary imitatio. In the first section, I offer an overview of the reception of DRN in such representative ninth-century writ…

Lucretius De Rerum Natura Lucretian manuscripts Dungal Carolingian culture florilegia reception studies astronomy eclipses history of humankind antipodes
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