Conrad of Hirsau

Conrad of Hirsau or Hirschau (Latin: Conradus Hirsaugiensis; c. 1070 – c. 1150) was a German Benedictine monk and writer of the Hirsau Abbey. He is known for his literary work Dialogus super auctores, an accessus ad auctores written about 1130.

Conrad identified himself as a "modern" in literary terms. His Dialogus is "the only theoretical discussion of the technique of the accessus [ad auctores] that has come down to us from medieval times". His own selection of authors consists of Aesop (actually the versifier Phaedrus), Avianus, Boethius, Cato, Cicero, Donatus, Homer, Juvenal, Lucan, Ovid, Persius, Prosper, Prudentius, Sallust, Sedulius, Statius, Virgil and Theodulus.[1][2]

Conrad has also been suggested as the author of the ascetical works, the Speculum virginum, De fructibus carnis et spiritus, Dialogus de mundi contemptu vel amore, and Allocutio ad Deum.

References

  1. Edwin A. Quauin, "The Medieval Accessus ad Auctores", Traditio, Vol. 3 (1945), pp. 215–264.
  2. Stephen M. Wheeler, "Introduction", in Accessus ad auctores: Medieval Introductions to the Authors (Codex latinus monacensis 19475) (Mediaeval Institute Publications, 2015), pp. 1–24.

Bibliography

  • A. Stuber, Conradi Hirsaugiensis Dialogus super Auctores sive Didascalon (Wurzburg, 1889)
  • Dialogus super auctores, Collection Latomus, XVII (Brussels, 1955) editor R. B. C. Huygens
  • The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism Volume 2, The Middle Ages edited by Alastair Minnis and Ian Johnson
  • Leslie G. Whitbread, Conrad of Hirsau as Literary Critic, Speculum, Vol. 47, No. 2 (Apr., 1972), pp. 234–245
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