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Latin Psalters

There exist a number of translations of the Book of Psalms into the Latin language. They are a resource used in the Liturgy of the Hours and other forms of the canonical hours in the Latin liturgical rites of the Catholic Church.

The Golden psalter open to Psalm 51(52), "Quid gloriaris in malitia, qui potens es in iniquitate?"

These translations are typically placed in a separate volume or a section of the breviary called the psalter, in which the psalms are arranged to be prayed at the canonical hours of the day. In the Middle Ages, psalters were often lavish illuminated manuscripts, and in the Romanesque and early Gothic period were the type of book most often chosen to be richly illuminated.

Versions edit

The Latin Church has a number of more or less different full translations of the psalms into Latin. Three of these translations, the Romana, Gallicana, and juxta Hebraicum, have been traditionally ascribed to Jerome, the author of most of the Latin Vulgate; however, the Romana was not produced by Jerome. Two other translations, the Pian and Nova Vulgata versions, were made in the 20th century.

Versio Vetus Latina edit

Also called the Psalterium Vetus, the psalter of the Old Latin Bible. Quotations from the Psalms in Latin authors show that a number of related but distinct Old Latin recensions were circulating in the mid-4th century. These had by then substantially replaced the older Latin 'Cyprianic Psalter', a recension found in the works of Cyprian of Carthage that only survived in the 4th-century writings of the Donatists; and are all thought to be revisions of a lost common early 3rd-century version.[1]

A 12th-century Latin bible from Monte Cassino (Ms. Cas. 557) preserves, alongside the Roman, Gallican and Iuxta Hebraeos psalters, a fourth complete version of the psalms extensively corrected with reference to the columns of the Hexapla Greek, possibly using a columnar transcription of the Hexapla psalter similar to that surviving in Milan. The underlying Latin text for this manuscript is believed to correspond with an early 3rd-century 'Cyprianic Psalter'.[1]

Versio Ambrosiana edit

This is the version used in the Ambrosian rite for use in Milan.[2]

Versio Mozarabica edit

This is the version used in the Mozarabic rite for use in Toledo.[2]

Versio Romana edit

The Roman Psalter, called also the Versio Romana or Psalterium Romanum, was traditionally identified with Jerome's first revision of the psalms completed in 384; which was thought to have been made from the Versio Vetus Latina, with cursory corrections to bring it more in line with the psalms in the common Greek text of the Septuagint. More recent scholarship rejects this theory.[3] The Roman Psalter is indeed one of five known revised versions of the mid-4th century Old Latin Psalter; but, compared with the four others the revisions in the Roman Psalter are in clumsy Latin and signally fail to follow Jerome's known translational principles, especially in failing to correct harmonised readings. Nevertheless, it is clear from Jerome's correspondence (especially in the long and detailed Epistle 106) that he was familiar with this psalter text, albeit without ever admitting any responsibility for it; and consequently it is assumed that the surviving Versio Romana represents the minimally revised Roman text as Jerome had found it.[4]

The Roman version is retained in the Roman Missal and is found in the writings of Pope Gregory the Great, but for the Divine Office, it was, from the 9th century onwards, replaced throughout most of the west by Jerome's so-called "Gallican" version. It lived on in England where it continued to be used until the Norman Conquest and in Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome and fragments of it were used in the Offices at St. Mark's Cathedral in Venice from at least 1609 until 1807.[5]

Versio Gallicana edit

The Versio Gallicana or Psalterium Gallicanum, also known as the Gallican Psalter (so called because it became spread in Gaul from the 9th century onward[6]) has traditionally been considered Jerome's second Latin translation of the Psalms, which he made from the Greek of the Hexapla between 386 and 389.[7] This became the psalter of the Sixto-Clementine Vulgate bible.[6]

This most influential psalter has a distinctive style which is attributable to its origins as a translation of the Septuagint.[8] Following the Septuagint, it eschews anthropomorphisms. For instance, the term rock is applied to God numerous times in the Hebrew Psalter, but the Latin term petra does not occur as an epithet for God in the gallicana. Instead more abstract words like refugium, "refuge"; locus munitus, "place of strength"; or adiutor, "helper" are used.[9]

Versio juxta Hebraicum edit

The versio juxta Hebraicum or versio iuxta Hebraeos was the last made by Jerome. It is often informally called the "Hebrew Psalter" despite being written in Latin. Rather than just revise the Gallicana, he translated these psalms anew from the Hebrew, using pre-Masoretic manuscripts ca. 392.[10] This psalter was present in the Bibles until Alcuin's reforms linked to the Carolingian liturgical reform: Alcuin replaced the versio juxta Hebraicum by a version of the psalter used in Gaul at the time. The latter became known as the Gallican psalter (see the section above), and it superseded the versio juxta Hebraicum. The versio juxta Hebraicum was kept in Spanish manuscripts of the Vulgate long after the Gallican psalter had supplanted it elsewhere.[11] The versio juxta Hebraicum was never used in the liturgy.[12]

Versio Piana edit

Under Pius XII, a new Latin translation of the psalms,[13] known as Versio Piana, Psalterium Vaticanum or Novum Psalterium,[14] was published by the Pontifical Biblical Institute.[13][15] This version is sometimes called the Bea psalter after its author, Augustin Bea.[16][a] In 1945, its use was officially permitted by the pope through the motu proprio In cotidianis precibus, but not required.[13][15]

Versio Nova Vulgata edit

In 1969, a new psalter was published which translated the Masoretic text while keeping much of the poetry and style of the Gallican psalter.[17] The 1969 psalter deviates from the previous versions in that it follows the Masoretic numbering of the psalms, rather than the Septuagint enumeration. It is the psalter used in the edition of the Roman Office published in 1986.[18]

Comparison edit

Below is a comparison of Jerome's two versions of the first three verses of the psalm Venite exsultemus (psalm 94 (95)) with the Vetus Latina, Ambrosiana, Mozarabica, Romana, Gallicana, and Hebraicum versions, as well as the two 20th century versions (Piana and Nova Vulgata), which illustrates some of the distinctions noted above:

Versio Vetus Latina[19] Versio Ambrosiana[20] Versio Mozarabica[21] Versio Romana[22][23] Versio Gallicana[24][25] Versio juxta Hebraicum[26] Versio Piana[24][27] Versio Nova Vulgata[28]
Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 (95)
Venite, exultemus in Domino: jubilemus Deo salutari nostro. Venite, exultemus Domino: jubilemus Deo salutari nostro. Venite, exultemus in domino, iubilemus deo saluatori nostro. Venite, exsultemus Domino; iubilemus Deo salutari nostro. Venite, exsultemus Domino; jubilemus Deo salutari nostro; Venite laudemus Dominum iubilemus petrae Iesu nostro Venite, exsultemus Domino, Acclamemus Petrae salutis nostrae: Venite, exsultemus Domino; iubilemus Deo salutari nostro.
Præveniamus vultum ejus in confessionem: et in psalmis jubilemus ei. Præveniamus faciem ejus in confessione: et in psalmis jubilemus illi. Preoccupemus faciem eius in confessione, et in psalmis iubilemus ei. Præoccupemus faciem eius in confessione, et in psalmis iubilemus ei. præoccupemus faciem ejus in confessione, et in psalmis jubilemus ei: praeoccupemus vultum eius in actione gratiarum in canticis iubilemus ei Accedamus in conspectum eius cum laudibus, Cum canticis exsultemus ei. Praeoccupemus faciem eius in confessione et in psalmis iubilemus ei.
Quia Deus magnus est, et rex magnus super omnes deos: quia non repelet Dominus populum suum. Quoniam Deus magnus Dominus: et Rex magnus super omnes deos. Quoniam deus magnus dominus, rex magnus super omnem terram. Quoniam Deus magnus Dominus, et rex magnus super omnes deos. quoniam Deus magnus Dominus, et rex magnus super omnes deos. quoniam fortis et magnus Dominus et rex magnus super omnes deos Nam Deus magnus est Dominus, Et Rex magnus super omnes deos. Quoniam Deus magnus Dominus, et rex magnus super omnes deos.

Enumeration edit

The enumeration of the psalms differs in the Nova Vulgata from that used in the earlier versions. The earlier versions take their enumeration from the Greek Septuagint. The Versio Nova Vulgata takes its enumeration from the Hebrew Masoretic Text.

Old enumeration used by the Vulgate and other early versions; taken from the Septuagint New enumeration used by the Versio Nova Vulgata and most modern English bibles; taken from the Masoretic Text
1-8
9 9-10
10-112 11-113
113 114-115
114-115 116
116-145 117-146
146-147 147
148-150
  • Psalms 9 and 10 in the Nova Vulgata are together as Psalm 9 in the older versions
  • Psalms 114 and 115 in the Nova Vulgata are Psalm 113 in the older versions
  • Psalms 114 and 115 in the older versions appear as Psalm 116 in the Nova Vulgata
  • Psalms 146 and 147 in the older versions form Psalm 147 in the Nova Vulgata
  • Psalms 10-112 and 116-145 (132 out of the 150) in the older versions are numbered lower by one than the same psalm in the Nova Vulgata.
  • Psalms 1-8 and 148-150, 11 psalms in total, are numbered the same in both the old versions and the new one.

Divisions edit

 
"Beatus initial" for the start of Psalm 1 "Beatus vir", from the Leiden St Louis Psalter; first of the early tripartite divisions of the psalms

Apart from the schemata described below, it was customary in medieval psalters to divide the text of the psalms in numerical sequence into sections or divisions, the start of which were typically marked by a much larger and more decorated initial letter than for the other psalms. The "B" of Psalm 1, Beatus Vir, usually was the most enlarged and decorated, and often those two words occupied a full page, the rounded shape of the letter being very suitable for decoration. These are often referred to as "Beatus initials". In Early Medieval psalters a three-fold division with decorated letters at Psalms 1, 51, 101 was typical, but by the Gothic period French psalters were often divided into eight sections, and English ones into ten, at Psalms 1, 26, 38, 51, 52, 68, 80, 97, 101 and 109.[29]

Schemata edit

A scheme (Latin schema, plural schemata) is an arrangement of all or most of the psalms for distribution to the various canonical hours. In addition to the psalms proper, these schemata typically include psalm-like canticles from other books of the Bible. Historically, these schemata have distributed the entire 150 psalms with added canticles over a period of one week, although the 1971 Liturgy of the Hours omits a few psalms and some verses and distributes the remainder over a 4-week cycle. Some of the more important schemes are detailed below.[30][31]

In addition to the rotating schema, the order of service has ordinary texts that are fixed. These include the Invitatory, normally psalm 94(95), and the canticles Benedictus Dominus, Magnificat, and Nunc dimittis.

Schema of Pope Pius V edit

As commissioned by the Council of Trent, St. Pius V published a reform of the Roman Breviary in 1568 for use by the churches of the Roman rite. The scheme used in this breviary[b] differs in some details from the Scheme of St. Benedict,[c] but follows its overall pattern.[32][33] Some obvious differences are that Sunday had three nocturns, while the other days had but one; Lauds and the daytime hours had less variation in the Psalmody; and Compline added Psalm 30. In addition, while St. Benedict made heavy use of "divided" Psalms, the Roman rite divided only Psalm 118.

This scheme was used by many religious orders as well, such as the Dominicans[34] (of which Pope Pius V was a member[35]).

Schema of Pope Pius X edit

In 1911, Pope Pius X reformed the Roman Breviary, re-arranging the psalms into a new scheme[d] so that there was less repetition and so that each day of the week had approximately the same amount of psalm-chanting.

Psalm 94 (the Invitiatory) was recited every day at the beginning of Matins. With Lauds, there are two schemes. Lauds I were celebrated on all Sundays and ferias, except from Septuagesima until Palm Sunday inclusive, and on feasts celebrated at any time of the year. Lauds II, having a more penitential character, were used on the Sundays and ferias of Advent until the vigil of Christmas and from Septuagesima until Monday of Holy Week inclusive. They were also used on vigils of the second and third class outside of Paschaltide. When Lauds II were said, the omitted psalm was said as a fourth psalm at Prime, in order to include all 150 psalms each week during penitential seasons; on Sundays with Lauds II, the scheme became 92, 99, 118i, and 118ii. On feasts which used the Sunday psalms, 53, 118i, and 118ii were said at Prime. On Sundays after Epiphany and Pentecost, the Athanasian Creed was said fourth at Prime; it was omitted if a commemoration of a Double feast or of an octave occurred.[36]

Schema of Pope Paul VI edit

In 1971 with the release of a new edition of the Divine Office under Pope Paul VI, the Liturgia Horarum, a new schema[e] was introduced which distributed 147 of the 150 psalms across a four-week cycle.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Augustin Bea's book Il nuovo Salterio Latino. Chiarimenti sull'origine e lo spirito della traduzione, Rome, 1946 (published in English in The Catholic Biblical Quarterly, Vol. 8, No. 1 (January, 1946), pp. 4-35) explains in details the criteria and the reasons for his version.
  2. ^ Available here.
  3. ^ Available here.
  4. ^ Available here.
  5. ^ Available here.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Norris, Oliver (2017-06-12). "Tracing Fortunatianus′ Psalter". In Dorfbauer, Lukas J.; Victoria, Zimmerl-Panagl (eds.). Fortunatianus redivivus: Bischof Fortunatian von Aquileia und sein Evangelienkommentar. Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum, [Extra Seriem]. De Gruyter. pp. 283–306 (283). doi:10.1515/9783110471588-011. ISBN 978-3-11-047158-8.
  2. ^ a b "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Breviary". www.newadvent.org. Retrieved 2019-08-10.
  3. ^ Goins, Scott (2014). "Jerome's Psalters". In Brown, William P. (ed.). Oxford Handbook to the Psalms. Oxford University Press. p. 188.
  4. ^ Norris, Oliver (2017). "Tracing Fortunatianus's Psalter". In Dorfbauer, Lukas J. (ed.). Fortunatianus ridivivus. CSEL. p. 285. doi:10.1515/9783110471588-011. ISBN 9783110471588.
  5. ^ Cattin, Giulio. Musica e Liturgia a San Marco. Edizione Fondazione Levi. pp. 57–59.
  6. ^ a b Canellis, Aline, ed. (2017). "Introduction : Du travail de Jérôme à la Vulgate" [Introduction: From Jerome's work to the Vulgate]. Jérôme : Préfaces aux livres de la Bible [Jerome : Preface to the books of the Bible] (in French). Abbeville: Éditions du Cerf. pp. 213, 217. ISBN 978-2-204-12618-2.
  7. ^ Canellis, Aline, ed. (2017). "Introduction : Retour à l'Hebraica veritas" [Introduction: Back to the Hebraica veritas]. Jérôme : Préfaces aux livres de la Bible [Jerome: Preface to the books of the Bible] (in French). Abbeville: Éditions du Cerf. pp. 90–93. ISBN 978-2-204-12618-2.
  8. ^ Plater, W.E.; White, H.J. (1926). A Grammar of the Vulgate. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  9. ^ Nova Vulgata Bibliorum Sacrorum Editio, Praenotanda, IN PSALTERIO, Editio typica altera
  10. ^ Angus, Samuel (1915). "Latin Vulgate (International Standard Bible Encyclopedia)". www.bible-researcher.com. Retrieved 2019-08-10.
  11. ^ Weber, Robert; Gryson, Roger, eds. (2007). "Praefatio". Biblia sacra : iuxta Vulgatam versionem. Oliver Wendell Holmes Library Phillips Academy (5 ed.). Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft. pp. VI, XV, XXV, XXXIV. ISBN 978-3-438-05303-9.
  12. ^ Canellis, Aline, ed. (2017). "Introduction : Du travail de Jérôme à la Vulgate" [Introduction: From Jerome's work to the Vulgate]. Jérôme : Préfaces aux livres de la Bible [Jerome : Preface to the books of the Bible] (in French). Abbeville: Éditions du Cerf. p. 213. ISBN 978-2-204-12618-2.
  13. ^ a b c Colunga, Alberto; Turrado, Lorenzo, eds. (1999). Biblia Sacra iuxta Vulgatam Clementinam Nova editio (10th ed.). Spain: Biblioteca de Autores Cristianos. p. 449. ISBN 84-7914-021-6. Vulgatae textui addimus in altera columna novam versionem latinam Instituti Biblici a Pio XII pro usu liturgico approbatam, die 24 martii 1945.
  14. ^ Cohen, Doron B. (2013-01-11). "Five: Translation compared: psalm 23 in its numerous versions". The Japanese Translations of the Hebrew Bible: History, Inventory and Analysis. BRILL. p. 230. ISBN 9789004243477.
  15. ^ a b "De Novae Psalmorum Conversionis Latinae usu in Persolvendo Divino Officio" (PDF). Acta Apostolicae Sedis. 37: 65–67. 1945.
  16. ^ "Compendium of the Reforms of the Roman Breviary, 1568 - 1961: Part 8.2 - The New Psalter of Pius XII and Card. Bea". New Liturgical Movement. Retrieved 2022-09-05.
  17. ^ CLIFFORD, RICHARD J. (2001). "The Authority of the "Nova Vulgata": A Note on a Recent Roman Document". The Catholic Biblical Quarterly. 63 (2): 197–202. ISSN 0008-7912. JSTOR 43724418 – via JSTOR.
  18. ^ Liturgia Horarum iuxta ritum Romanum: Editio typica altera, Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2000, Vol. III, p. 9, item 3
  19. ^ Sabatier, Pierre; de La Rue, Vincent (1743). Bibliorum Sacrorum latinae versiones antiquae : seu, Vetus italica, et caeterae quaecunque in codicibus mss. & antiquorum libris reperiri potuerunt : quae cum Vulgata latina, & cum textu graeco comparantur. Vol. 2. Princeton Theological Seminary Library. Remis : Apud Reginaldum Florentain. pp. 189.
  20. ^ Breviarium Ambrosianum (in Latin). Vol. Pars aestiva. Joannis Bernardonii. 1830. pp. 98–99.
  21. ^ Gilson, J. P. (Julius Parnell) (1905). The Mozarabic psalter (MS. British Museum, Add. 30, 851.). University of California Libraries. London, [Harrison and Sons, Printers]. pp. 83–84.
  22. ^ From Liber Hymnarius, 1993, ISBN 2-85274-076-1
  23. ^ "Psalterium Romanum". www.liberpsalmorum.info. Retrieved 2019-08-14.
  24. ^ a b Colunga, Alberto; Turrado, Lorenzo, eds. (1999). Biblia Sacra iuxta Vulgatam Clementinam Nova editio (10 ed.). Spain: Biblioteca de Autores Cristianos. p. 534. ISBN 84-7914-021-6.
  25. ^ From the Clementine Psalter
  26. ^ From the juxta Hebraicum in the 2007 Stuttgart edition, available here and here.
  27. ^ "Psalterium Pianum". www.liberpsalmorum.info. Retrieved 2019-08-14.
  28. ^ "LIBER PSALMORUM - Nova Vulgata, Vetus Testamentum". www.vatican.va. Retrieved 2019-08-10.
  29. ^ McKendrick, Scott, Lowden, John and Doyle, Kathleen, (eds), Royal Manuscripts, The Genius of Illumination, p. 269, 2011, British Library, 9780712358156
  30. ^ . kellerbook.com. Archived from the original on 5 August 2012. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
  31. ^ "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Breviary". www.newadvent.org. Retrieved 2019-08-19.
  32. ^ The Roman breviary: reformed by order of the Holy oecumenical council of Trent: published by order of Pope St. Pius V. William Blackwood and Sons. 1908. pp. 1–213.
  33. ^ "Pre-Pius X Psalter (up to 1911)". gregorianbooks.com. January 14, 2018.
  34. ^ Cormier, Hyacinthus (1909). Breviarium Juxta Ritum S. Ordinis Praedicatorum (PDF). Roma. pp. 1–153.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  35. ^ "Saint Pius V | pope". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2019-08-08.
  36. ^ The Hours of the Divine Office in English and Latin: a bilingual edition of the Roman Breviary text, in three volumes. Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press. 1964.

External links edit

Latin psalters

  • Vetus Latina psalter (pp. 9–293) Latin text
  • Breviarium Ambrosianum Latin text
  • Psalterium Romanum Latin text
  • Psalterium Gallicanum Latin text
  • Psalterium juxta Hebraicum (also available here) Latin text
  • Psalterium Mozarabicum Latin text
  • Psalterium Pianum Latin text
  • Psalterium Neo-Vulgatum Latin text
  • Liturgia Horarum Online A very nice, practical and versatile version to read the psalter online.
  • Liberpsalmorum.info A list of the different Latin psalters from the Vetus Latina to the Nova Vulgata.

Miscellaneous

  • of the psalm De profundis, giving the Roman, Gallican, Pian, and Neo-Vulgate versions of psalm 129.
  • Fr. John Zuhlsdorf's comparison of the psalm Beatus vir, giving the Roman, Gallican, Neo-vulgate, Pian, and Ambrosian versions of psalm 1.
  • Theo Keller's tables of historical psalter schemas. Includes the four choices of the Psalterium Monasticum above

Further reading edit

  • Mohrmann, Christine (1961). "The New Latin Psalter: Its Diction and Style". Études sur le latin des chrétiens, Latin chrétien et médiéval (in French and English). Vol. II. Ed. di Storia e Letteratura. pp. 109–131.

latin, psalters, psalter, general, psalter, confused, with, primer, prayer, book, there, exist, number, translations, book, psalms, into, latin, language, they, resource, used, liturgy, hours, other, forms, canonical, hours, latin, liturgical, rites, catholic,. For the Psalter in general see Psalter Not to be confused with Primer prayer book There exist a number of translations of the Book of Psalms into the Latin language They are a resource used in the Liturgy of the Hours and other forms of the canonical hours in the Latin liturgical rites of the Catholic Church The Golden psalter open to Psalm 51 52 Quid gloriaris in malitia qui potens es in iniquitate These translations are typically placed in a separate volume or a section of the breviary called the psalter in which the psalms are arranged to be prayed at the canonical hours of the day In the Middle Ages psalters were often lavish illuminated manuscripts and in the Romanesque and early Gothic period were the type of book most often chosen to be richly illuminated Contents 1 Versions 1 1 Versio Vetus Latina 1 2 Versio Ambrosiana 1 3 Versio Mozarabica 1 4 Versio Romana 1 5 Versio Gallicana 1 6 Versio juxta Hebraicum 1 7 Versio Piana 1 8 Versio Nova Vulgata 2 Comparison 3 Enumeration 4 Divisions 5 Schemata 5 1 Schema of Pope Pius V 5 2 Schema of Pope Pius X 5 3 Schema of Pope Paul VI 6 Notes 7 See also 8 References 9 External links 10 Further readingVersions editThe Latin Church has a number of more or less different full translations of the psalms into Latin Three of these translations the Romana Gallicana and juxta Hebraicum have been traditionally ascribed to Jerome the author of most of the Latin Vulgate however the Romana was not produced by Jerome Two other translations the Pian and Nova Vulgata versions were made in the 20th century Versio Vetus Latina edit See also Vetus Latina Also called the Psalterium Vetus the psalter of the Old Latin Bible Quotations from the Psalms in Latin authors show that a number of related but distinct Old Latin recensions were circulating in the mid 4th century These had by then substantially replaced the older Latin Cyprianic Psalter a recension found in the works of Cyprian of Carthage that only survived in the 4th century writings of the Donatists and are all thought to be revisions of a lost common early 3rd century version 1 A 12th century Latin bible from Monte Cassino Ms Cas 557 preserves alongside the Roman Gallican and Iuxta Hebraeos psalters a fourth complete version of the psalms extensively corrected with reference to the columns of the Hexapla Greek possibly using a columnar transcription of the Hexapla psalter similar to that surviving in Milan The underlying Latin text for this manuscript is believed to correspond with an early 3rd century Cyprianic Psalter 1 Versio Ambrosiana edit This is the version used in the Ambrosian rite for use in Milan 2 Versio Mozarabica edit This is the version used in the Mozarabic rite for use in Toledo 2 Versio Romana edit The Roman Psalter called also the Versio Romana or Psalterium Romanum was traditionally identified with Jerome s first revision of the psalms completed in 384 which was thought to have been made from the Versio Vetus Latina with cursory corrections to bring it more in line with the psalms in the common Greek text of the Septuagint More recent scholarship rejects this theory 3 The Roman Psalter is indeed one of five known revised versions of the mid 4th century Old Latin Psalter but compared with the four others the revisions in the Roman Psalter are in clumsy Latin and signally fail to follow Jerome s known translational principles especially in failing to correct harmonised readings Nevertheless it is clear from Jerome s correspondence especially in the long and detailed Epistle 106 that he was familiar with this psalter text albeit without ever admitting any responsibility for it and consequently it is assumed that the surviving Versio Romana represents the minimally revised Roman text as Jerome had found it 4 The Roman version is retained in the Roman Missal and is found in the writings of Pope Gregory the Great but for the Divine Office it was from the 9th century onwards replaced throughout most of the west by Jerome s so called Gallican version It lived on in England where it continued to be used until the Norman Conquest and in Saint Peter s Basilica in Rome and fragments of it were used in the Offices at St Mark s Cathedral in Venice from at least 1609 until 1807 5 Versio Gallicana edit Main article fr Psautier gallican The Versio Gallicana or Psalterium Gallicanum also known as the Gallican Psalter so called because it became spread in Gaul from the 9th century onward 6 has traditionally been considered Jerome s second Latin translation of the Psalms which he made from the Greek of the Hexapla between 386 and 389 7 This became the psalter of the Sixto Clementine Vulgate bible 6 This most influential psalter has a distinctive style which is attributable to its origins as a translation of the Septuagint 8 Following the Septuagint it eschews anthropomorphisms For instance the term rock is applied to God numerous times in the Hebrew Psalter but the Latin term petra does not occur as an epithet for God in the gallicana Instead more abstract words like refugium refuge locus munitus place of strength or adiutor helper are used 9 Versio juxta Hebraicum edit The versio juxta Hebraicum or versio iuxta Hebraeos was the last made by Jerome It is often informally called the Hebrew Psalter despite being written in Latin Rather than just revise the Gallicana he translated these psalms anew from the Hebrew using pre Masoretic manuscripts ca 392 10 This psalter was present in the Bibles until Alcuin s reforms linked to the Carolingian liturgical reform Alcuin replaced the versio juxta Hebraicum by a version of the psalter used in Gaul at the time The latter became known as the Gallican psalter see the section above and it superseded the versio juxta Hebraicum The versio juxta Hebraicum was kept in Spanish manuscripts of the Vulgate long after the Gallican psalter had supplanted it elsewhere 11 The versio juxta Hebraicum was never used in the liturgy 12 Versio Piana edit See also Liturgical reforms of Pope Pius XII Under Pius XII a new Latin translation of the psalms 13 known as Versio Piana Psalterium Vaticanum or Novum Psalterium 14 was published by the Pontifical Biblical Institute 13 15 This version is sometimes called the Bea psalter after its author Augustin Bea 16 a In 1945 its use was officially permitted by the pope through the motu proprio In cotidianis precibus but not required 13 15 Versio Nova Vulgata edit See also Nova Vulgata Sacrosanctum Concilium and Liturgiam authenticam In 1969 a new psalter was published which translated the Masoretic text while keeping much of the poetry and style of the Gallican psalter 17 The 1969 psalter deviates from the previous versions in that it follows the Masoretic numbering of the psalms rather than the Septuagint enumeration It is the psalter used in the edition of the Roman Office published in 1986 18 Comparison editBelow is a comparison of Jerome s two versions of the first three verses of the psalm Venite exsultemus psalm 94 95 with the Vetus Latina Ambrosiana Mozarabica Romana Gallicana and Hebraicum versions as well as the two 20th century versions Piana and Nova Vulgata which illustrates some of the distinctions noted above Versio Vetus Latina 19 Versio Ambrosiana 20 Versio Mozarabica 21 Versio Romana 22 23 Versio Gallicana 24 25 Versio juxta Hebraicum 26 Versio Piana 24 27 Versio Nova Vulgata 28 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 Psalmus 94 95 Venite exultemus in Domino jubilemus Deo salutari nostro Venite exultemus Domino jubilemus Deo salutari nostro Venite exultemus in domino iubilemus deo saluatori nostro Venite exsultemus Domino iubilemus Deo salutari nostro Venite exsultemus Domino jubilemus Deo salutari nostro Venite laudemus Dominum iubilemus petrae Iesu nostro Venite exsultemus Domino Acclamemus Petrae salutis nostrae Venite exsultemus Domino iubilemus Deo salutari nostro Praeveniamus vultum ejus in confessionem et in psalmis jubilemus ei Praeveniamus faciem ejus in confessione et in psalmis jubilemus illi Preoccupemus faciem eius in confessione et in psalmis iubilemus ei Praeoccupemus faciem eius in confessione et in psalmis iubilemus ei praeoccupemus faciem ejus in confessione et in psalmis jubilemus ei praeoccupemus vultum eius in actione gratiarum in canticis iubilemus ei Accedamus in conspectum eius cum laudibus Cum canticis exsultemus ei Praeoccupemus faciem eius in confessione et in psalmis iubilemus ei Quia Deus magnus est et rex magnus super omnes deos quia non repelet Dominus populum suum Quoniam Deus magnus Dominus et Rex magnus super omnes deos Quoniam deus magnus dominus rex magnus super omnem terram Quoniam Deus magnus Dominus et rex magnus super omnes deos quoniam Deus magnus Dominus et rex magnus super omnes deos quoniam fortis et magnus Dominus et rex magnus super omnes deos Nam Deus magnus est Dominus Et Rex magnus super omnes deos Quoniam Deus magnus Dominus et rex magnus super omnes deos Enumeration edit The enumeration of the psalms differs in the Nova Vulgata from that used in the earlier versions The earlier versions take their enumeration from the Greek Septuagint The Versio Nova Vulgata takes its enumeration from the Hebrew Masoretic Text Old enumeration used by the Vulgate and other early versions taken from the Septuagint New enumeration used by the Versio Nova Vulgata and most modern English bibles taken from the Masoretic Text1 89 9 1010 112 11 113113 114 115114 115 116116 145 117 146146 147 147148 150 Psalms 9 and 10 in the Nova Vulgata are together as Psalm 9 in the older versions Psalms 114 and 115 in the Nova Vulgata are Psalm 113 in the older versions Psalms 114 and 115 in the older versions appear as Psalm 116 in the Nova Vulgata Psalms 146 and 147 in the older versions form Psalm 147 in the Nova Vulgata Psalms 10 112 and 116 145 132 out of the 150 in the older versions are numbered lower by one than the same psalm in the Nova Vulgata Psalms 1 8 and 148 150 11 psalms in total are numbered the same in both the old versions and the new one Divisions edit nbsp Beatus initial for the start of Psalm 1 Beatus vir from the Leiden St Louis Psalter first of the early tripartite divisions of the psalmsApart from the schemata described below it was customary in medieval psalters to divide the text of the psalms in numerical sequence into sections or divisions the start of which were typically marked by a much larger and more decorated initial letter than for the other psalms The B of Psalm 1 Beatus Vir usually was the most enlarged and decorated and often those two words occupied a full page the rounded shape of the letter being very suitable for decoration These are often referred to as Beatus initials In Early Medieval psalters a three fold division with decorated letters at Psalms 1 51 101 was typical but by the Gothic period French psalters were often divided into eight sections and English ones into ten at Psalms 1 26 38 51 52 68 80 97 101 and 109 29 Schemata edit A scheme Latin schema plural schemata is an arrangement of all or most of the psalms for distribution to the various canonical hours In addition to the psalms proper these schemata typically include psalm like canticles from other books of the Bible Historically these schemata have distributed the entire 150 psalms with added canticles over a period of one week although the 1971 Liturgy of the Hours omits a few psalms and some verses and distributes the remainder over a 4 week cycle Some of the more important schemes are detailed below 30 31 In addition to the rotating schema the order of service has ordinary texts that are fixed These include the Invitatory normally psalm 94 95 and the canticles Benedictus Dominus Magnificat and Nunc dimittis Schema of Pope Pius V edit As commissioned by the Council of Trent St Pius V published a reform of the Roman Breviary in 1568 for use by the churches of the Roman rite The scheme used in this breviary b differs in some details from the Scheme of St Benedict c but follows its overall pattern 32 33 Some obvious differences are that Sunday had three nocturns while the other days had but one Lauds and the daytime hours had less variation in the Psalmody and Compline added Psalm 30 In addition while St Benedict made heavy use of divided Psalms the Roman rite divided only Psalm 118 This scheme was used by many religious orders as well such as the Dominicans 34 of which Pope Pius V was a member 35 Schema of Pope Pius X edit See also Reform of the Roman Breviary by Pope Pius X In 1911 Pope Pius X reformed the Roman Breviary re arranging the psalms into a new scheme d so that there was less repetition and so that each day of the week had approximately the same amount of psalm chanting Psalm 94 the Invitiatory was recited every day at the beginning of Matins With Lauds there are two schemes Lauds I were celebrated on all Sundays and ferias except from Septuagesima until Palm Sunday inclusive and on feasts celebrated at any time of the year Lauds II having a more penitential character were used on the Sundays and ferias of Advent until the vigil of Christmas and from Septuagesima until Monday of Holy Week inclusive They were also used on vigils of the second and third class outside of Paschaltide When Lauds II were said the omitted psalm was said as a fourth psalm at Prime in order to include all 150 psalms each week during penitential seasons on Sundays with Lauds II the scheme became 92 99 118i and 118ii On feasts which used the Sunday psalms 53 118i and 118ii were said at Prime On Sundays after Epiphany and Pentecost the Athanasian Creed was said fourth at Prime it was omitted if a commemoration of a Double feast or of an octave occurred 36 Schema of Pope Paul VI edit See also Mass of Paul VI In 1971 with the release of a new edition of the Divine Office under Pope Paul VI the Liturgia Horarum a new schema e was introduced which distributed 147 of the 150 psalms across a four week cycle Notes edit Augustin Bea s book Il nuovo Salterio Latino Chiarimenti sull origine e lo spirito della traduzione Rome 1946 published in English in The Catholic Biblical Quarterly Vol 8 No 1 January 1946 pp 4 35 explains in details the criteria and the reasons for his version Available here Available here Available here Available here See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Latin psalter Vulgate Sixto Clementine Vulgate Septuagint Vetus Latina Beatus virReferences edit a b Norris Oliver 2017 06 12 Tracing Fortunatianus Psalter In Dorfbauer Lukas J Victoria Zimmerl Panagl eds Fortunatianus redivivus Bischof Fortunatian von Aquileia und sein Evangelienkommentar Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum Extra Seriem De Gruyter pp 283 306 283 doi 10 1515 9783110471588 011 ISBN 978 3 11 047158 8 a b CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Breviary www newadvent org Retrieved 2019 08 10 Goins Scott 2014 Jerome s Psalters In Brown William P ed Oxford Handbook to the Psalms Oxford University Press p 188 Norris Oliver 2017 Tracing Fortunatianus s Psalter In Dorfbauer Lukas J ed Fortunatianus ridivivus CSEL p 285 doi 10 1515 9783110471588 011 ISBN 9783110471588 Cattin Giulio Musica e Liturgia a San Marco Edizione Fondazione Levi pp 57 59 a b Canellis Aline ed 2017 Introduction Du travail de Jerome a la Vulgate Introduction From Jerome s work to the Vulgate Jerome Prefaces aux livres de la Bible Jerome Preface to the books of the Bible in French Abbeville Editions du Cerf pp 213 217 ISBN 978 2 204 12618 2 Canellis Aline ed 2017 Introduction Retour a l Hebraica veritas Introduction Back to the Hebraica veritas Jerome Prefaces aux livres de la Bible Jerome Preface to the books of the Bible in French Abbeville Editions du Cerf pp 90 93 ISBN 978 2 204 12618 2 Plater W E White H J 1926 A Grammar of the Vulgate Oxford Clarendon Press Nova Vulgata Bibliorum Sacrorum Editio Praenotanda IN PSALTERIO Editio typica altera Angus Samuel 1915 Latin Vulgate International Standard Bible Encyclopedia www bible researcher com Retrieved 2019 08 10 Weber Robert Gryson Roger eds 2007 Praefatio Biblia sacra iuxta Vulgatam versionem Oliver Wendell Holmes Library Phillips Academy 5 ed Stuttgart Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft pp VI XV XXV XXXIV ISBN 978 3 438 05303 9 Canellis Aline ed 2017 Introduction Du travail de Jerome a la Vulgate Introduction From Jerome s work to the Vulgate Jerome Prefaces aux livres de la Bible Jerome Preface to the books of the Bible in French Abbeville Editions du Cerf p 213 ISBN 978 2 204 12618 2 a b c Colunga Alberto Turrado Lorenzo eds 1999 Biblia Sacra iuxta Vulgatam Clementinam Nova editio 10th ed Spain Biblioteca de Autores Cristianos p 449 ISBN 84 7914 021 6 Vulgatae textui addimus in altera columna novam versionem latinam Instituti Biblici a Pio XII pro usu liturgico approbatam die 24 martii 1945 Cohen Doron B 2013 01 11 Five Translation compared psalm 23 in its numerous versions The Japanese Translations of the Hebrew Bible History Inventory and Analysis BRILL p 230 ISBN 9789004243477 a b De Novae Psalmorum Conversionis Latinae usu in Persolvendo Divino Officio PDF Acta Apostolicae Sedis 37 65 67 1945 Compendium of the Reforms of the Roman Breviary 1568 1961 Part 8 2 The New Psalter of Pius XII and Card Bea New Liturgical Movement Retrieved 2022 09 05 CLIFFORD RICHARD J 2001 The Authority of the Nova Vulgata A Note on a Recent Roman Document The Catholic Biblical Quarterly 63 2 197 202 ISSN 0008 7912 JSTOR 43724418 via JSTOR Liturgia Horarum iuxta ritum Romanum Editio typica altera Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2000 Vol III p 9 item 3 Sabatier Pierre de La Rue Vincent 1743 Bibliorum Sacrorum latinae versiones antiquae seu Vetus italica et caeterae quaecunque in codicibus mss amp antiquorum libris reperiri potuerunt quae cum Vulgata latina amp cum textu graeco comparantur Vol 2 Princeton Theological Seminary Library Remis Apud Reginaldum Florentain pp 189 Breviarium Ambrosianum in Latin Vol Pars aestiva Joannis Bernardonii 1830 pp 98 99 Gilson J P Julius Parnell 1905 The Mozarabic psalter MS British Museum Add 30 851 University of California Libraries London Harrison and Sons Printers pp 83 84 From Liber Hymnarius 1993 ISBN 2 85274 076 1 Psalterium Romanum www liberpsalmorum info Retrieved 2019 08 14 a b Colunga Alberto Turrado Lorenzo eds 1999 Biblia Sacra iuxta Vulgatam Clementinam Nova editio 10 ed Spain Biblioteca de Autores Cristianos p 534 ISBN 84 7914 021 6 From the Clementine Psalter From the juxta Hebraicum in the 2007 Stuttgart edition available here and here Psalterium Pianum www liberpsalmorum info Retrieved 2019 08 14 LIBER PSALMORUM Nova Vulgata Vetus Testamentum www vatican va Retrieved 2019 08 10 McKendrick Scott Lowden John and Doyle Kathleen eds Royal Manuscripts The Genius of Illumination p 269 2011 British Library 9780712358156 Psalter Schemas by Theo Keller kellerbook com Archived from the original on 5 August 2012 Retrieved 12 April 2018 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Breviary www newadvent org Retrieved 2019 08 19 The Roman breviary reformed by order of the Holy oecumenical council of Trent published by order of Pope St Pius V William Blackwood and Sons 1908 pp 1 213 Pre Pius X Psalter up to 1911 gregorianbooks com January 14 2018 Cormier Hyacinthus 1909 Breviarium Juxta Ritum S Ordinis Praedicatorum PDF Roma pp 1 153 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Saint Pius V pope Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2019 08 08 The Hours of the Divine Office in English and Latin a bilingual edition of the Roman Breviary text in three volumes Collegeville Minnesota Liturgical Press 1964 External links edit Latin psalters Vetus Latina psalter pp 9 293 Latin text Breviarium Ambrosianum Latin text Psalterium Romanum Latin text Psalterium Gallicanum Latin text Psalterium juxta Hebraicum also available here Latin text Psalterium Mozarabicum Latin text Psalterium Pianum Latin text Psalterium Neo Vulgatum Latin text Liturgia Horarum Online A very nice practical and versatile version to read the psalter online Liberpsalmorum info A list of the different Latin psalters from the Vetus Latina to the Nova Vulgata Miscellaneous Theo Keller s comparison of the psalm De profundis giving the Roman Gallican Pian and Neo Vulgate versions of psalm 129 Fr John Zuhlsdorf s comparison of the psalm Beatus vir giving the Roman Gallican Neo vulgate Pian and Ambrosian versions of psalm 1 Theo Keller s tables of historical psalter schemas Includes the four choices of the Psalterium Monasticum aboveFurther reading edit Mohrmann Christine 1961 The New Latin Psalter Its Diction and Style Etudes sur le latin des chretiens Latin chretien et medieval in French and English Vol II Ed di Storia e Letteratura pp 109 131 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Latin Psalters amp oldid 1213380842 Versio Gallicana, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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