An aggrieved heroine in Merovingian Gaul : Venantius Fortunatus, Radegund’s lament on the destruction of Thuringia, and echoing Ovid’s "Heroides"

2015
journal article
article
dc.abstract.enThis paper is devoted to De excidio Thoringiae, a poem written by Venantius Fortunatus in the voice of queen Radegund, an ex-wife of the king Chlothar I and, at the time of its composition, a nun at the Abbey of the Holy Cross at Poitiers. As in his many other poems, also in this text Fortunatus reuses the poetics of one of his favorite literary models, Ovid. Now it is the poetics of the héroïde, a letter of a mythical heroine to her absent lover. Yet what makes Fortunatus’s De excidio unique is the fact that the Ovidian paradigm, rather than properly reapplied, is only ‘echoed’: the ‘love’ between the female protagonist and her male addressee (Radegund’s last surviving cousin, Amalafrid) is described non as an actual experience but merely as a remote, quasi-mythical past, an affair that did not really take place because the two would-be lovers were much too young then. Similarly, the figure of Radegund as pictured in De excidio is wholly fictionalized (hence it cannot derogate from the reputation Radegund-the nun deserves) and, indeed, used only as a literary ‘costume’: a careful reader can easily notice that the speaking ego does not fully identify with the role of a ‘lovelorn maiden’. This ostentatious literariness makes the whole situation justifiable and attractive for the readership.pl
dc.affiliationWydział Filologiczny : Instytut Filologii Klasycznejpl
dc.contributor.authorWasyl, Anna Maria - 132547 pl
dc.date.accessioned2015-07-13T12:42:46Z
dc.date.available2015-07-13T12:42:46Z
dc.date.issued2015pl
dc.description.number1pl
dc.description.physical64-75pl
dc.description.publication1pl
dc.description.volume45pl
dc.identifier.eissn2035-2611pl
dc.identifier.issn0006-6583pl
dc.identifier.urihttp://ruj.uj.edu.pl/xmlui/handle/item/12610
dc.languageengpl
dc.language.containeritapl
dc.participationWasyl, Anna: 100%;pl
dc.rights.licenceBez licencji otwartego dostępu
dc.subject.enVenantius Fortunatuspl
dc.subject.enLatin elegypl
dc.subject.enLatin poetry of late antiquitypl
dc.subject.enMerovingian Gaulpl
dc.subject.plWenancjusz Fortunatuspl
dc.subject.plelegia łacińskapl
dc.subject.plpoezja łacińska późnego antykupl
dc.subject.plGalia Merowingówpl
dc.subtypeArticlepl
dc.titleAn aggrieved heroine in Merovingian Gaul : Venantius Fortunatus, Radegund’s lament on the destruction of Thuringia, and echoing Ovid’s "Heroides"pl
dc.title.journalBollettino di Studi Latinipl
dc.typeJournalArticlepl
dspace.entity.typePublication
dc.abstract.enpl
This paper is devoted to De excidio Thoringiae, a poem written by Venantius Fortunatus in the voice of queen Radegund, an ex-wife of the king Chlothar I and, at the time of its composition, a nun at the Abbey of the Holy Cross at Poitiers. As in his many other poems, also in this text Fortunatus reuses the poetics of one of his favorite literary models, Ovid. Now it is the poetics of the héroïde, a letter of a mythical heroine to her absent lover. Yet what makes Fortunatus’s De excidio unique is the fact that the Ovidian paradigm, rather than properly reapplied, is only ‘echoed’: the ‘love’ between the female protagonist and her male addressee (Radegund’s last surviving cousin, Amalafrid) is described non as an actual experience but merely as a remote, quasi-mythical past, an affair that did not really take place because the two would-be lovers were much too young then. Similarly, the figure of Radegund as pictured in De excidio is wholly fictionalized (hence it cannot derogate from the reputation Radegund-the nun deserves) and, indeed, used only as a literary ‘costume’: a careful reader can easily notice that the speaking ego does not fully identify with the role of a ‘lovelorn maiden’. This ostentatious literariness makes the whole situation justifiable and attractive for the readership.
dc.affiliationpl
Wydział Filologiczny : Instytut Filologii Klasycznej
dc.contributor.authorpl
Wasyl, Anna Maria - 132547
dc.date.accessioned
2015-07-13T12:42:46Z
dc.date.available
2015-07-13T12:42:46Z
dc.date.issuedpl
2015
dc.description.numberpl
1
dc.description.physicalpl
64-75
dc.description.publicationpl
1
dc.description.volumepl
45
dc.identifier.eissnpl
2035-2611
dc.identifier.issnpl
0006-6583
dc.identifier.uri
http://ruj.uj.edu.pl/xmlui/handle/item/12610
dc.languagepl
eng
dc.language.containerpl
ita
dc.participationpl
Wasyl, Anna: 100%;
dc.rights.licence
Bez licencji otwartego dostępu
dc.subject.enpl
Venantius Fortunatus
dc.subject.enpl
Latin elegy
dc.subject.enpl
Latin poetry of late antiquity
dc.subject.enpl
Merovingian Gaul
dc.subject.plpl
Wenancjusz Fortunatus
dc.subject.plpl
elegia łacińska
dc.subject.plpl
poezja łacińska późnego antyku
dc.subject.plpl
Galia Merowingów
dc.subtypepl
Article
dc.titlepl
An aggrieved heroine in Merovingian Gaul : Venantius Fortunatus, Radegund’s lament on the destruction of Thuringia, and echoing Ovid’s "Heroides"
dc.title.journalpl
Bollettino di Studi Latini
dc.typepl
JournalArticle
dspace.entity.type
Publication
Affiliations

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