
Biblical Commentaries from the Canterbury School of Theodore and Hadrian: 10 (Cambridge Studies in Anglo-Saxon England, Series Number 10)
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Annotated, 1/26/1995
EAN 9780521330893, ISBN10: 0521330890
Hardcover, 628 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 4 cm
Language: English
This volume includes the first edition of a previously unknown text which throws light on the intellectual history of early medieval Europe. The biblical commentaries represent the teaching of two gifted Greek scholars who came to England from the Byzantine East. Theodore, Archbishop of Canterbury (668–90) and his colleague Hadrian (d. 710) taught the Bible to a group of Anglo-Saxon scholars, who recorded their teaching. The resulting commentaries illustrate the high point of biblical scholarship between late antiquity and the Renaissance. The commentaries, found by Professor Bischoff in Milan in 1936, constitute one of the most important medieval texts discovered this century. The edition is introduced by substantial chapters on the intellectual background of the texts and their manuscript sources. The Latin texts themselves are accompanied by facing English translations and extensive notes.
Preface
List of abbreviations
1. Introduction
2. Archbishop Theodore
3. Abbot Hadrian
4. Theodore and Hadrian in England
5. The sources of the Canterbury biblical commentaries
6. The nature of the Canterbury biblical commentaries
7. The manuscripts
Part I
Texts and Translations
8. First commentary on the Pentateuch (PentI)
9. Supplementary commentary on Genesis, Exodus and the gospels (Gn-Ex-EvIa)
10. Second commentary on the gospels (EvII)
Part II. Commentary to the texts
Appendices
Figures
Bibliography
Indexes.