Anonymous Verse Version: Difference between revisions

From The Seven Sages of Rome
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{{Secondary Version
{{Secondary Version
|Has Description=Like [[Hans von Bühel, Dyocletianus Leben|Hans von Bühel's poem]], the anonymous German verse version is part of the [[H (Historia Septem Sapientum)|Version H]] tradition, and  explicitly credits a Latin text as its source (Kunkel 2023). It was composed in the first half of the fifteenth century, and survives in four manuscripts. The poem is some 7,000 lines in length, with a sizable prologue that establishes the anti-feminist bent of the narrative, linking the ''Sieben weise Meister'' motifs of feminine wickedness to classical precedent.
|Has Description=Like [[Hans von Bühel, Dyocletianus Leben|Hans von Bühel's poem]], the anonymous German verse version is part of the [[H (Historia Septem Sapientum)|Version H]] tradition, and  explicitly credits a Latin text as its source (Kunkel 2023). It was composed in the first half of the fifteenth century, and survives in four manuscripts. The poem is some 7,000 lines in length, with a sizable prologue that establishes the anti-feminist bent of the narrative, linking the ''Sieben weise Meister'' motifs of feminine wickedness to classical precedent.
|Has Parent Version=Versfassung / Verse Version
|Has Siglum=Anonymous Verse Version
|Has Siglum=Anonymous Verse Version
|Has Branch Of Tradition=West
|Has Branch Of Tradition=West

Revision as of 09:16, 25 August 2025

Like Hans von Bühel's poem, the anonymous German verse version is part of the Version H tradition, and explicitly credits a Latin text as its source (Kunkel 2023). It was composed in the first half of the fifteenth century, and survives in four manuscripts. The poem is some 7,000 lines in length, with a sizable prologue that establishes the anti-feminist bent of the narrative, linking the Sieben weise Meister motifs of feminine wickedness to classical precedent.

General Information



Siglum of the version of the Seven Sages
Branch of the tradition

Language & Composition


Date of Composition
1401 - 1450
Source for date of composition

Literature & Editions

Recorded Branch of This Secondary Version