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 Siglum=Anonymous Verse Version | |||
|Has Branch Of Tradition=West | |||
|Is Adapted From=Versfassung / Verse Version; German Version H; Latin Version H | |||
|Has Original Language Of Version=German (High and Low German) | |||
|Has Start Date Of Composition=1401 | |Has Start Date Of Composition=1401 | ||
|Has End Date Of Composition=1450 | |Has End Date Of Composition=1450 | ||
|Has Source For Date Of Text Composition=Kunkel (2023); Gerdes (1992) | |Has Source For Date Of Text Composition=Kunkel (2023); Gerdes (1992) | ||
|Has Modern Research Literature=Gerdes (1992); Kunkel (2023) | |Has Text Language=German (High and Low German) | ||
|Has Modern Research Literature=Gerdes (1992); Kunkel (2023); Paschke (1891); Gerdes (2004) | |||
|Has Modern Edition=Keller, Altdeutsche Gedichte (1846) | |||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 13:37, 19 March 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
Parent Versions
Siglum of the version of the Seven Sages
Branch of the tradition
Language & Composition
Literature & Editions
Modern research literature
Modern Editions
Recorded Branch of This Secondary Version
- H (Historia Septem Sapientum)
- Armenian Version H
- Czech Version H: Kronika sedmi mudrců
- Danish Version H
- Dutch Version H
- English Version H
- French Version H
- German Version H
- Hungarian Version H: Pontianus tsaszar historiaia
- Icelandic Version H
- Latin Version H
- Lithuanian Version H
- Polish Version H
- Russian Version H
- Scots Version H: Rolland, Seuin Seages
- Spanish Version H: Los Siete Sabios de Roma
- Swedish Version H: Sju vise mästare
- Yiddish Version H
Adaptations
Adapted from (version)
Pattern of Embedded Stories in This Version