Three Medieval Latin Liturgical Dramas: The Three Students, The Play of Daniel & Hildegard of Bingen’s The Play of the Virtues

$14.95
by C. T. Hadavas

Shop Now
This edition makes available to intermediate Latin students three dramatic works of Medieval Latin literature. The earliest of these, the eleventh-century Tres Clerici (“The Three Students”), recounts one of the miracles of that most popular of medieval saints, Nicholas. This drama’s economical construction and refined use of a simple metrical unit exemplify how a playwright can convey much in few words. The other two plays included in this collection are the outstanding examples of Latin liturgical drama composed in the twelfth century. The Danielis Ludus (“The Play of Daniel”), written in the cathedral school of Beauvais, adapts material from the Bible to relate the meaning of a story from the ancient past – the Hebrew prophet Daniel’s interactions with two foreign rulers, Belshazzar and Darius – to contemporary issues. This play’s rhetorical sophistication, metrical variety, and musical invention are unsurpassed in the dramatic works from this period.Hildegard of Bingen’s Ordo Virtutum (“The Play of the Virtues”) has the distinction of being the only play in this group whose author is not anonymous. Hildegard left behind more than just a name, however, for her impressive literary, scientific, theological, and musical oeuvre rivals those of her more traditionally educated male peers in quality and surpasses them in diversity. In addition, Hildegard’s female-centered play, whose verses are rich with symbolism, fuses together liturgical drama and theological allegory in an innovative manner that anticipates the new genre of morality plays written in the vernacular languages two centuries later.This edition provides significant assistance with vocabulary, grammar, and syntax, with special attention paid to Medieval Latin forms. There are also extensive literary and historical notes. C. T. Hadavas is chair of the Classics Department and Program Advisor of Comparative Literature at Beloit College (Beloit, WI). His interests include ancient philosophy, ancient historiography, Medieval Latin literature, and comparative literature. His digitization of Beloit's copy of the Nuremberg Chronicle, a 1493 world history, is available online: http: //www.beloit.edu/nuremberg/ His translation with notes of a facsimile version of the Nuremberg Chronicle, done with Michael Zellmann-Rohrer and published by Smith&Press, are available on Amazon in a four-volume series entitled: Liber Chronicarum Translation Volumes 1-4.

Customer Reviews

No ratings. Be the first to rate

 customer ratings


How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness.

Review This Product

Share your thoughts with other customers