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Allegories of the Iliad

Autor Ioannes Tzetzes

Editorial HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS

Allegories of the Iliad
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  • Editorial HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS
  • ISBN13 9780674967854
  • ISBN10 0674967852
  • Tipus LLIBRE
  • Pàgines 577
  • Col.lecció Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library #
  • Any Edició 2015
  • Idioma Anglès
  • Encuadernació Tela

Allegories of the Iliad

Autor Ioannes Tzetzes

Editorial HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS

-5% dte.    31,50€
29,93€
Estalvia 1,58€
No disponible, consulti disponibilitat
Enviament gratuït
Espanya peninsular
Enviament GRATUÏT a partir de 19€

a Espanya peninsular

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Detalls del llibre

In the early 1140s, the Bavarian princess Bertha von Sulzbach arrived in Constantinople to marry the Byzantine emperor Manuel Komnenos. Wanting to learn more about her new homeland, the future empress Eirene commissioned the grammarian Ioannes Tzetzes to compose a version of the "Iliad" as an introduction to Greek literature and culture. He drafted a lengthy dodecasyllable poem in twenty-four books, reflecting the divisions of the "Iliad," that combined summaries of the events of the siege of Troy with allegorical interpretations. To make the "Iliad" relevant to his Christian audience, Tzetzes reinterpreted the pagan gods from various allegorical perspectives. As historical allegory (or euhemerism), the gods are simply ancient kings erroneously deified by the pagan poet; as astrological allegory, they become planets whose position and movement affect human life; as moral allegory Athena represents wisdom, Aphrodite desire. As a didactic explanation of pagan ancient Greek culture to Orthodox Christians, the work is deeply rooted in the mid-twelfth-century circumstances of the cosmopolitan Comnenian court. As a critical reworking of the "Iliad," it must also be seen as part of the millennia-long and increasingly global tradition of Homeric adaptation.