Medieval and Modern Philologies

Series | Medieval and Modern Philologies
Review | The poetriae of the Latin Middle Ages
Chapter | The Ars versificaria of Gervase of Melkley

The Ars versificaria of Gervase of Melkley

Structure, Hierarchy, Borrowings

Abstract

Gervase of Melkley, a younger contemporary of Geoffrey of Vinsauf, writes his De arte versificatoria et modo dictandi at the peak of a revisionary movement that places the discussions of figures and tropes inherited from classical and medieval grammatical and rhetorical traditions in new contexts, creating what we now call the Arts of Poetry and Prose. Gervase’s art draws upon the works of Matthew of Vendome, Geoffrey of Vinsauf, and Bernardus Silvestris for its doctrine and its examples. But how often does Gervase refer to these writers? How does he use their arts in his art? When does he borrow from them? What doctrine and which examples does he borrow? Does he cite his references and, if so, what are his citation practices? This chapter surveys Gervase’s borrowings from the works of Matthew, Geoffrey, and Bernardus by way of a review of the Index nominum and Index scriptorium of Hans Jurgen Graebener’s modern edition of the De arte versificatoria. The review locates Gervase’s borrowings of doctrine and examples with greater precision, and corrects errors in the indices as needed. Charting the precise citation practices of Gervase clarifies the meaning of his hierarchy of the three writers, places his long supposed use of the Poetria nova in serious doubt, and reopens the question of his art’s date.


Open access

Submitted: Sept. 15, 2017 | Published March 16, 2018 | Language: it

Keywords Geoffrey of VinsaufGervase of MelkleyMedieval poeticsMatthew of VendomeBernardus Silvestris


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