Bibliography

Sloan, Michael C., The harmonious organ of Sedulius Scottus: introduction to his Collectaneum in Apostolum and translation of its prologue and commentaries on Galatians and Ephesians, Millennium-Studien, 39, Göttingen: De Gruyter, 2012.

Citation details
Contributors
Work
The harmonious organ of Sedulius Scottus: introduction to his Collectaneum in Apostolum and translation of its prologue and commentaries on Galatians and Ephesians
Place
Göttingen
Publisher
De Gruyter
Year
2012
Description
Abstract (cited)

This book introduces and translates Sedulius Scottus' Prologue (to the entire Collectaneum in Apostolum) and commentaries on Galatians and Ephesians. The introduction outlines the historical context of composition, identifies Sedulius' literary model - Servius, discusses Sedulius' organizing trope for the Prologue - the septem circumstantiae, asserts for what purpose and for whom he composed the Collectaneum, explains pertinent philological and stylistic issues, such as formatting, existing (or lack thereof) traits of Hiberno Latin, and Sedulius' knowledge of Greek, and it explores his use of exegetical and theological sources - predominantly Jerome, Augustine, and Pelagius. Since the commentaries are based upon these formative religious authors (among many others), the introduction also surveys Sedulius' doctrinal stances on important theological and ecclesiastical issues of his own time with particular relation to his reception of these authors. Sedulius' Collectaneum in Apostolum reveals an erudite author familiar with the style of classical commentaries, which he uses to harmonize the sometimes discordant voices of patristic authors for the purposes of education in accordance with Carolingian programmatic aims.

Subjects and topics
Headings
Hiberno-Latin literature to c.1169
Approaches
textual editing textual translation
Sources
Texts
History, society and culture
Agents
Sedulius ScottusSedulius Scottus
(fl. 9th century)
Irish scriptural scholar, teacher, grammarian and poet who made a career in Francia and became a leading intellectual figure at the court of Charles the Bald.
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Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
January 2022