Czech Version H: Kronika sedmi mudrců: Difference between revisions

From The Seven Sages of Rome
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Rhodygo, Ef
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Revision as of 11:40, 20 January 2026

Whilst the Seven Sages were published within the Gesta Romanarum in Bohemian in the 1400s, the oldest copy of the Seven Sages alone is a 1502 print, translated from either an early German version of the Historia, as suggested by Nebeský (1847), or a reprint of a Latin version, as Murko (1890) argues, by Mikuláš Bakalář, a Slovak printer who trained in Krakow.  

The text itself was enjoyed widely, evidenced by the number and regularity of prints. Uniquely, many of these were not reprints, but in fact unique translations of the Seven Sages from different cultures. The Czech version is also notable for five anomalous tales: Sylwius, Heres Regni, Tonstrix, Filius Profusus, and Papirius.


General Information

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Language & Composition

Translated into (languages)
Date of Composition

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Recorded Branch of This Secondary Version

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Pattern of Embedded Stories in This Version