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De naturis rerum, libri duo
With the Poem of the Same Author, De laudibus divinae sapientiae
Published in 1863, these texts illuminate twelfth-century scientific knowledge and theology in prose and verse form.
Alexander Neckam (Author), Thomas Wright (Edited by)
9781108047876, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 15 November 2012
626 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 3.5 cm, 0.91 kg
Thomas Wright (1810–77) was a highly prolific scholar of Old and Middle English and archaeology, although some of his work, particularly that on prehistory, was contentious. The present work, which he edited and published in 1863, comprises two texts by Alexander Neckam (1157–1217). The son of Richard I's foster mother, Neckam was a respected teacher and prolific scholar who became abbot of Cirencester. The larger of these texts, De naturis rerum, consists of a scientific manual followed by a theological treatise, a commentary on Ecclesiastes. Neckam later produced an abbreviated verse form of this, the second text found here. The first part of each text is a compendium of all the scientific knowledge of western Europe and England in the twelfth century, which Neckam aimed to treat morally as well as factually. In producing this edition, Wright has included the Latin marginal annotations, possibly by Neckam himself, found in his manuscript exemplars.
Preface
De naturis rerum
De laudibus divinae sapientiae
Glossarial index
Index.
Subject Areas: British & Irish history [HBJD1]
