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Hugh of Saint Victor

Hugh of Saint Victor (c. 1096 – 11 February 1141), was a Saxon canon regular and a leading theologian and writer on mystical theology.

Hugh of Saint Victor
Hugh of Saint Victor
Bornc. 1096
Probably the Duchy of Saxony
Died11 February 1141
EraMedieval philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolScholasticism
Influences
  • [1]

Life Edit

As with many medieval figures, little is known about Hugh's early life. He was probably born in the 1090s. His homeland may have been Lorraine, Ypres in Flanders, or the Duchy of Saxony.[3] Some sources say that his birth occurred in the Harz district, being the eldest son of Baron Conrad of Blankenburg. Over the protests of his family, he entered the Priory of St. Pancras, a community of canons regular, where he had studied, located at Hamerleve or Hamersleben, near Halberstadt.[4]

Due to civil unrest shortly after his entry to the priory, Hugh's uncle, Reinhard of Blankenburg, who was the local bishop, advised him to transfer to the Abbey of Saint Victor in Paris, where he himself had studied theology. He accepted his uncle's advice and made the move at a date which is unclear, possibly 1115–18 or around 1120.[5] He spent the rest of his life there, advancing to head the school.[4]

Works Edit

 
De claustro anime, 14th-century manuscript. Hereford, Cathedral Library, Manuscript collection, P.5.XII.

Hugh wrote many works from the 1120s until his death (Migne, Patrologia Latina contains 46 works by Hugh, and this is not a full collection), including works of theology (both treatises and sententiae), commentaries (mostly on the Bible but also including one of pseudo-Dionysius' Celestial Hierarchies), mysticism, philosophy and the arts, and a number of letters and sermons.[6]

Hugh was influenced by many people, but chiefly by Saint Augustine, especially in holding that the arts and philosophy can serve theology.

Hugh's most significant works include:

  • De sacramentis christianae fidei (On the Mysteries of the Christian Faith/On the Sacraments of the Christian Faith)[7] It is Hugh's most celebrated masterpiece and presents the bulk of Hugh's thoughts on theological and mystical ideas, ranging from God and angels to natural laws.
  • Didascalicon de studio legendi (Didascalicon, or, On the Study of Reading).[8] The subtitle to the Didascalicon, De Studio Legendi, makes the purpose of Hugh's tract clear. Written for the students at the school of Saint Victor, the work is a preliminary introduction to the theological and exegetical studies taught at the Parisian schools, the most advanced centers of learning in Europe in the 12th century. Citing a wide range classical and medieval sources, and with Augustine as his principal authority, Hugh sets forth a comprehensive synthesis of rhetoric, philosophy, and exegesis, designed to serve as a foundation for advanced theological study. The Didascalicon is primarily pedagogical, and not speculative, in nature. It provides the modern reader with a clear sense of the intellectual equipment expected of, if not always fully possessed by, high medieval theologians.
  • In 1125–30, Hugh wrote three treatises structured around Noah's ark: De arca Noe morali (Noah's Moral Ark/On the Moral Interpretation of the Ark of Noah), De arca Noe mystica (Noah's Mystical Ark/On the Mystic Interpretation of the Ark of Noah), and De vanitate mundi (The World's Vanity).[9] De arca Noe morali and De arca Noe mystica reflect Hugh's fascination with both mysticism and the book of Genesis.
  • In Hierarchiam celestem commentaria (Commentary on the Celestial Hierarchy), a commentary on the work by pseudo-Dionysius, perhaps begun around 1125.[10] After Eriugena's translation of Dionysius in the ninth century, there is almost no interest shown in Dionysius until Hugh's commentary.[11] It is possible that Hugh may have decided to produce the commentary (which perhaps originated in lectures to students) because of the continuing (incorrect) belief that the patron saint of the Abbey of Saint Denis, Saint Denis, was to be identified with pseudo-Dionysius. Dionysian thought did not form an important influence on the rest of Hugh's work. Hugh's commentary, however, became a major part of the twelfth and thirteenth-century surge in interest in Dionysius; his and Eriugena's commentaries were often attached to the Dionysian corpus in manuscripts, such that his thought had great influence on later interpretation of Dionysius by Richard of St Victor, Thomas Gallus, Hugh of Balma, Bonaventure and others.[12]

Other works by Hugh of St Victor include:

  • In Salomonis Ecclesiasten (Commentary on Ecclesiastes).[13]
  • De tribus diebus (On the Three Days).[14]
  • De sapientia animae Christi.[15]
  • De unione corporis et spiritus (The Union of the Body and the Spirit).[16]
  • Epitome Dindimi in philosophiam (Epitome of Dindimus on Philosophy).[17]
  • Practica Geometriae (The Practice of Geometry).[17]
  • De Grammatica (On Grammar).[17]
  • Soliloquium de Arrha Animae (The Soliloquy on the Earnest Money of the Soul).[18]
  • De contemplatione et ejus speciebus (On Contemplation and its Forms). This is one of the earliest systematic works devoted to contemplation. It appears not to have been written by Hugh himself, but composed by one of his students, possibly from classnotes from his lectures.[19]
  • On Sacred Scripture and its Authors.[20]
  • Various other treatises exist whose authorship by Hugh is uncertain. Six of these are reprinted, in Latin in Roger Baron, ed, Hugues de Saint-Victor: Six Opuscules Spirituels, Sources chrétiennes 155, (Paris, 1969). They are: De meditatione,[21] De verbo Dei, De substantia dilectionis, Quid vere diligendus est, De quinque septenis ,[22] and De septem donis Spiritus sancti[23]
  • De anima is a treatise of the soul: the text will be found in the edition of Hugh's works in the Patrologia Latina of J. P. Migne. Part of it was paraphrased in the West Mercian dialect of Middle English by the author of the Katherine Group.[24]

Various other works were wrongly attributed to Hugh in later thought. One such particularly influential work was the Exposition of the Rule of St Augustine, now accepted to be from the Victorine school but not by Hugh of St Victor.[25]

A new edition of Hugh's works has been started. The first publication is: Hugonis de Sancto Victore De sacramentis Christiane fidei, ed. Rainer Berndt, Münster: Aschendorff, 2008.

Philosophy and theology Edit

The early Didascalicon was an elementary, encyclopedic approach to God and Christ, in which Hugh avoided controversial subjects and focused on what he took to be commonplaces of Catholic Christianity. In it he outlined three types of philosophy or "science" [scientia] that can help mortals improve themselves and advance toward God: theoretical philosophy (theology, mathematics, physics) provides them with truth, practical philosophy (ethics, economics, politics) aids them in becoming virtuous and prudent, and "mechanical" or "illiberal" philosophy (e.g., carpentry, agriculture, medicine) yields physical benefits. A fourth philosophy, logic, is preparatory to the others and exists to ensure clear and proper conclusions in them. Hugh's deeply mystical bent did not prevent him from seeing philosophy as a useful tool for understanding the divine, or from using it to argue on behalf of faith.

Hugh was heavily influenced by Augustine's exegesis of Genesis. Divine Wisdom was the archetypal form of creation. The creation of the world in six days was a mystery for man to contemplate, perhaps even a sacrament. God's forming order from chaos to make the world was a message to humans to rise up from their own chaos of ignorance and become creatures of Wisdom and therefore beauty. This kind of mystical-ethical interpretation was typical for Hugh, who tended to find Genesis interesting for its moral lessons rather than as a literal account of events.

Along with Jesus, the sacraments were divine gifts that God gave man to redeem himself, though God could have used other means. Hugh separated everything along the lines of opus creationis and opus restaurationis. Opus Creationis was the works of the creation, referring to God's creative activity, the true good natures of things, and the original state and destiny of humanity. The opus restaurationis was that which dealt with the reasons for God sending Jesus and the consequences of that. Hugh believed that God did not have to send Jesus and that He had other options open to Him. Why he chose to send Jesus is a mystery we are to meditate on and is to be learned through revelation, with the aid of philosophy to facilitate understanding.

Legacy Edit

Within the Abbey of St Victor, many scholars who followed him are often known as the 'School of St Victor'. Andrew of St Victor studied under Hugh.[26] Others, who probably entered the community too late to be directly educated by Hugh, include Richard of Saint Victor and Godfrey.[27] One of Hugh's ideals that did not take root in St Victor, however, was his embracing of science and philosophy as tools for approaching God.[citation needed]

His works are in hundreds of libraries all across Europe.[citation needed] He is quoted in many other publications after his death,[citation needed] and Bonaventure praises him in De reductione artium ad theologiam.

He was also an influence on the critic Erich Auerbach, who cited this passage from Hugh of St Victor in his essay "Philology and World Literature":[28]

It is therefore, a source of great virtue for the practiced mind to learn, bit by bit, first to change about in visible and transitory things, so that afterwards it may be able to leave them behind altogether. The person who finds his homeland sweet is a tender beginner; he to whom every soil is as his native one is already strong; but he is perfect to whom the entire world is as a foreign place. The tender soul has fixed his love on one spot in the world; the strong person has extended his love to all places; the perfect man has extinguished his.

Works Edit

Modern editions Edit

Latin text
  • Latin texts of Hugh of St. Victor are available in the Migne edition at Documenta Catholica Omnia, http://www.documentacatholicaomnia.eu/30_10_1096-1141-_Hugo_De_S_Victore.html
  • Henry Buttimer, Hugonis de Sancto Victore. Didascalicon. De Studio Legendi (Washington, DC: Catholic University Press, 1939).
  • Hugh of St Victor, L'oeuvre de Hugues de Saint-Victor. 1. De institutione novitiorum. De virtute orandi. De laude caritatis. De arrha animae, Latin text edited by H.B. Feiss & P. Sicard; French translation by D. Poirel, H. Rochais & P. Sicard. Introduction, notes and appendices by D. Poirel (Turnhout, Brepols, 1997)
  • Hugues de Saint-Victor, L'oeuvre de Hugues de Saint-Victor. 2. Super Canticum Mariae. Pro Assumptione Virginis. De beatae Mariae virginitate. Egredietur virga, Maria porta, edited by B. Jollès (Turnhout: Brepols, 2000)
  • Hugo de Sancto Victore, De archa Noe. Libellus de formatione arche, ed Patricius Sicard, CCCM vol 176, Hugonis de Sancto Victore Opera, I (Turnhout: Brepols, 2001)
  • Hugo de Sancto Victore, De tribus diebus, ed Dominique Poirel, CCCM vol 177, Hugonis de Sancto Victore Opera, II (Turnhout: Brepols, 2002)
  • Hugo de Sancto Victore, De sacramentis Christiane fidei, ed. Rainer Berndt (Münster: Aschendorff, 2008)
  • Hugo de Sancto Victore, Super Ierarchiam Dionysii, CCCM vol 178, Hugonis de Sancto Victore Opera, III (Turnhout: Brepols, forthcoming)
English translations
  • Hugh of St Victor, Explanation of the Rule of St. Augustine, translated by Aloysius Smith (London, 1911)
  • Hugh of St Victor, The Soul's Betrothal-Gift, translated by FS Taylor (London, 1945) [translation of De Arrha Animae]
  • Hugh of St Victor, On the sacraments of the Christian faith: (De sacramentis), translated by Roy J Deferrari (Cambridge, MA: Mediaeval Academy of America, 1951)
  • Hugh of Saint-Victor: Selected spiritual writings, translated by a religious of C.S.M.V.; with an introduction by Aelred Squire. (London: Faber, 1962) [reprinted in Eugene, Oregon: Wipf & Stock Publishers, 2009] [contains a translation of the first four books of De arca Noe morali and the first two (of four) books of De vanitate mundi].
  • The Didascalicon of Hugh of St. Victor, translated by Jerome Taylor (New York and London: Columbia U. P., 1961) [reprinted 1991] [translation of the Didascalicon]
  • Soliloquy on the Earnest Money of the Soul, trans Kevin Herbert (Milwaukee, WI: Marquette University Press, 1984) [translation of Soliloquium de Arrha Animae]
  • Hugh of St Victor, Practica Geometriae, trans. Frederick A Homann (Milwaukee: Marquette University Press, 1991)
  • Hugh of St Victor, extracts from Introductory Notes on the Scriptures and on the Scriptural Writers, trans Denys Turner, in Denys Turner, Eros and Allegory: Medieval Exegesis of the Song of Songs (Kalamazoo, MI: Cistercian Publications, 1995), 265-274
  • Hugh of Saint Victor on the Sacraments of the Christian Faith, trans Roy Deferrari (Eugene, Oregon: Wipf & Stock Publishers, 2007) [translation of De Sacramentis Christianae Fidei]
  • Boyd Taylor Coolman and Dale M Coulter, eds, Trinity and creation: a selection of works of Hugh, Richard and Adam of St Victor (Turnhout: Brepols, 2010) [includes translation of Hugh of St Victor, On the Three Days and Sentences on Divinity]
  • Hugh Feiss, ed, On love: a selection of works of Hugh, Adam, Achard, Richard and Godfrey of St Victor (Turnhout: Brepols, 2011) [includes translations of The Praise of the Bridegroom, On the Substance of Love, On the Praise of Charity, What Truly Should be Loved?, On the Four Degrees of Violent Love, trans. A.B. Kraebel, and Soliloquy on the Betrothal-Gift of the Soul]
  • Franklin T. Harkins and Frans van Liere, eds, Interpretation of scripture: theory. A selection of works of Hugh, Andrew, Richard and Godfrey of St Victor, and of Robert of Melun (Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols, 2012) [contains translations of: Didascalion on the study of reading, introduced and translated by Franklin T Harkins; On Sacred Scripture and its authors and The diligent examiner, introduced and translated by Frans van Liere; On the sacraments of the Christian faith, prologues, introduced and translated by Christopher P Evans]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Dominique Poirel, Les origines germaniques de la pensée d'Hugues de Saint-Victor p. 173 sqq.
  2. ^ Furnal, J., The Dialectic of Faith and Reason in Cornelio Fabro’s Reading of Kierkegaard’s Theology (Theological Studies, 2017, Vol. 78(3) 718–739), p. 735
  3. ^ B McGinn, The Growth of Mysticism, (1994), p365
  4. ^ a b Catholic Encyclopedia:Hugh of St. Victor
  5. ^ McGinn (1994), p365, gives 'around 1120' as the date.
  6. ^ A helpful, though not necessarily complete, list of Hugh's work – along with modern editions and translations – is printed in Hugh Feiss, ed, On Love, (2010), pp15-20.
  7. ^ Reprinted in PL 176:173-618 and in Hugonis de Sancto Victore De sacramentis Christiane fidei, ed. Rainer Berndt, Münster: Aschendorff, 2008. There is an English translation in Hugh of St Victor, On the sacraments of the Christian faith: (De sacramentis), translated by Roy J Deferrari, (Cambridge, MA: Mediaeval Academy of America, 1951). An English translation of the Prologues is made in Franklin T. Harkins and Frans van Liere, eds, Interpretation of scripture: theory. A selection of works of Hugh, Andrew, Richard and Godfrey of St Victor, and of Robert of Melun, (Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols, 2012), pp253-268.
  8. ^ The Latin text is in Henry Buttimer, Hugonis de Sancto Victore. Didascalicon. De Studio Legendi, (Washington, DC: Catholic University Press, 1939). An older English translation is in Jerome Taylor, The Didascalicon of Hugh of St Victor, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1961). A more recent translation is Franklin T. Harkins and Frans van Liere, eds, Interpretation of scripture: theory. A selection of works of Hugh, Andrew, Richard and Godfrey of St Victor, and of Robert of Melun, (Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols, 2012), pp61-202.
  9. ^ These three treatises are printed in PL 176:617-740.
  10. ^ An older edition of the Latin text is in PL 175:928A. The modern edition is Hugonis de Sancto Victore Opera III: Super Ierarchiam Dionysii, (Turnhout: Brepols), CCCM, vol. 178.
  11. ^ David Luscombe, "The Commentary of Hugh of Saint-Victor on the Celestial Hierarchy", in T. Boiadjiev, G. Kapriev and A. Speer, eds, Die Dionysius-Rezeption im Mittelalter, (Turnholt:Brepols, 2000), pp160-164; D. Poirel, "Le 'chant dionysien' du IXe au XIIe siècle", in M. Goullet and M. Parisse (eds), Les historiens et le latin medieval, (Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne, 2001), pp151–176.
  12. ^ For further commentary on this work, see Rorem, Paul (2008). "The Early Latin Dionysius: Eriugena and Hugh of St. Victor". Modern Theology. 24 (4): 601–614. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0025.2008.00488.x.
  13. ^ Reprinted in PL 175:115A.
  14. ^ Reprinted in PL 176. A detailed study of this work exists in Dominique Porel, Livre de la nature et débat trinitaire au XXe siècle, Le De tribus diebus de Hugues de Saint-Victor, (Turnhout: Brepols, 2002), 169-198. Much of this introduction is summarised in the introduction to the English translation in Boyd Taylor Coolman and Dale M Coulter, eds, Trinity and creation: a selection of works of Hugh, Richard and Adam of St Victor, (Turnhout: Brepols, 2010).
  15. ^ Reprinted in PL 176:845-856.
  16. ^ Reprinted in PL 177:285-294.
  17. ^ a b c Reprinted in Roger Baron, ed., Hugonis de Sancto Victore Opera Propaedeutica (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1966).
  18. ^ Reprinted in Muller, Karl, ed., Hugo von St. Victor: Soliloquium de Arrha Animae Und De Vanitate Mundi (Bonn: A. Marcus Une E. Weber's Verlag,1913). There is an English translation in Soliloquy on the Earnest Money of the Soul, trans Kevin Herbert, (Milwaukee, WI: Marquette University Press, 1965).
  19. ^ See Bernard McGinn, The Growth of Mysticism, (1994), pp384-390. Latin text: Barthélemy Hauréau, Hugues de Saint-Victor. Paris, 1859 (pp. 177−210). A French translation is in Roger Baron, Hugues de Saint-Victor: La contemplation et ses espèces, (Tournai-Paris: Desclée, 1958).
  20. ^ An English translation is in Franklin T. Harkins and Frans van Liere, eds, Interpretation of scripture: theory. A selection of works of Hugh, Andrew, Richard and Godfrey of St Victor, and of Robert of Melun, (Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols, 2012)
  21. ^ Printed in PL176:993-998
  22. ^ Printed in PL175:405-414.
  23. ^ Printed in PL176:405-414.
  24. ^ Eggebroten, Anne. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 August 2011. Retrieved 23 December 2009.
  25. ^ Thomas F Martin OSA, Our Restless Heart: The Augustinian Tradition, (2003), p82
  26. ^ Berndt, Rainer (2002). "Andrew of Saint-Victor". In André Vauchez (ed.). Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages. James Clarke & Co.
  27. ^ B McGinn, The Growth of Mysticism, (1994), p366
  28. ^ Erich Auerbach (2009). Damrosch, David; Melas, Natalie; Buthelezi, Mbongiseni (eds.). The Princeton Sourcebook in Comparative Literature. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 124.

Further reading Edit

  • Sicard, P. (2015) Iter Victorinum. La tradition manuscrite des œuvres de Hugues et de Richard de Saint-Victor. Répertoire complémentaire et études (Bibliotheca Victorina 24), Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2015 (ISBN 978-2-503-55492-1)
  • Acton Institute (1992) "In the Liberal Tradition: Hugh of St Victor (1096–1141)". Religion and Liberty, 2:1 (Jan.–Feb., 1992)
  • Coolman, Boyd Taylor. (2010) The Theology of Hugh of St. Victor: An Interpretation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
  • Evans, G. R. (2002) Fifty Key Medieval Thinkers. London: Routledge.
  • Harkins, Franklin T, Reading and the Work of Restoration: History and Scripture in the Theology of Hugh of St Victor, (Brepols, 2009)
  • Illich, Ivan (1993) In the Vineyard of the Text: a Commentary to Hugh's Didascalicon. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
  • Luscombe, David, "The Commentary of Hugh of Saint-Victor on the Celestial Hierarchy", in T. Boiadjiev, G. Kapriev and A. Speer (eds), Die Dionysius-Rezeption im Mittelalter (Turnholt: Brepols, 2000).
  • McGinn, Bernard, The Growth of Mysticism, (1994), pp 370–395
  • Moore, R. (1998) Jews and Christians in the Life and Thought of Hugh of St. Victor. USF
  • Rorem, Paul (2009). Hugh of Saint Victor. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Rudolph, Conrad, "First, I Find the Center Point": Reading the Text of Hugh of Saint Victor's The Mystic Ark (2004)
  • Wilson, R. M., ed. (1938) Sawles Warde: an early Middle English homily; edited from the Bodley, Royal and Cotton MSS. Leeds: University of Leeds, School of English Language
  • Conrad Rudolph, The Mystic Ark: Hugh of Saint Victor, Art, and Thought in the Twelfth Century ( 2014)

External links Edit

hugh, saint, victor, 1096, february, 1141, saxon, canon, regular, leading, theologian, writer, mystical, theology, bornc, 1096, probably, duchy, saxonydied11, february, 1141abbey, saint, victor, pariseramedieval, philosophyregionwestern, philosophyschoolschola. Hugh of Saint Victor c 1096 11 February 1141 was a Saxon canon regular and a leading theologian and writer on mystical theology Hugh of Saint VictorHugh of Saint VictorBornc 1096 Probably the Duchy of SaxonyDied11 February 1141Abbey of Saint Victor ParisEraMedieval philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolScholasticismInfluences Aristotle Augustine Boethius Pseudo Dionysius Bede Rabanus Maurus Rashi Eriugena Ivo of Chartres William of Champeaux 1 Influenced Peter Lombard Richard of Saint Victor Erich Auerbach Soren Kierkegaard 2 Contents 1 Life 2 Works 3 Philosophy and theology 4 Legacy 5 Works 5 1 Modern editions 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksLife EditAs with many medieval figures little is known about Hugh s early life He was probably born in the 1090s His homeland may have been Lorraine Ypres in Flanders or the Duchy of Saxony 3 Some sources say that his birth occurred in the Harz district being the eldest son of Baron Conrad of Blankenburg Over the protests of his family he entered the Priory of St Pancras a community of canons regular where he had studied located at Hamerleve or Hamersleben near Halberstadt 4 Due to civil unrest shortly after his entry to the priory Hugh s uncle Reinhard of Blankenburg who was the local bishop advised him to transfer to the Abbey of Saint Victor in Paris where he himself had studied theology He accepted his uncle s advice and made the move at a date which is unclear possibly 1115 18 or around 1120 5 He spent the rest of his life there advancing to head the school 4 Works Edit De claustro anime 14th century manuscript Hereford Cathedral Library Manuscript collection P 5 XII Hugh wrote many works from the 1120s until his death Migne Patrologia Latina contains 46 works by Hugh and this is not a full collection including works of theology both treatises and sententiae commentaries mostly on the Bible but also including one of pseudo Dionysius Celestial Hierarchies mysticism philosophy and the arts and a number of letters and sermons 6 Hugh was influenced by many people but chiefly by Saint Augustine especially in holding that the arts and philosophy can serve theology Hugh s most significant works include De sacramentis christianae fidei On the Mysteries of the Christian Faith On the Sacraments of the Christian Faith 7 It is Hugh s most celebrated masterpiece and presents the bulk of Hugh s thoughts on theological and mystical ideas ranging from God and angels to natural laws Didascalicon de studio legendi Didascalicon or On the Study of Reading 8 The subtitle to the Didascalicon De Studio Legendi makes the purpose of Hugh s tract clear Written for the students at the school of Saint Victor the work is a preliminary introduction to the theological and exegetical studies taught at the Parisian schools the most advanced centers of learning in Europe in the 12th century Citing a wide range classical and medieval sources and with Augustine as his principal authority Hugh sets forth a comprehensive synthesis of rhetoric philosophy and exegesis designed to serve as a foundation for advanced theological study The Didascalicon is primarily pedagogical and not speculative in nature It provides the modern reader with a clear sense of the intellectual equipment expected of if not always fully possessed by high medieval theologians In 1125 30 Hugh wrote three treatises structured around Noah s ark De arca Noe morali Noah s Moral Ark On the Moral Interpretation of the Ark of Noah De arca Noe mystica Noah s Mystical Ark On the Mystic Interpretation of the Ark of Noah and De vanitate mundi The World s Vanity 9 De arca Noe morali and De arca Noe mystica reflect Hugh s fascination with both mysticism and the book of Genesis In Hierarchiam celestem commentaria Commentary on the Celestial Hierarchy a commentary on the work by pseudo Dionysius perhaps begun around 1125 10 After Eriugena s translation of Dionysius in the ninth century there is almost no interest shown in Dionysius until Hugh s commentary 11 It is possible that Hugh may have decided to produce the commentary which perhaps originated in lectures to students because of the continuing incorrect belief that the patron saint of the Abbey of Saint Denis Saint Denis was to be identified with pseudo Dionysius Dionysian thought did not form an important influence on the rest of Hugh s work Hugh s commentary however became a major part of the twelfth and thirteenth century surge in interest in Dionysius his and Eriugena s commentaries were often attached to the Dionysian corpus in manuscripts such that his thought had great influence on later interpretation of Dionysius by Richard of St Victor Thomas Gallus Hugh of Balma Bonaventure and others 12 Other works by Hugh of St Victor include In Salomonis Ecclesiasten Commentary on Ecclesiastes 13 De tribus diebus On the Three Days 14 De sapientia animae Christi 15 De unione corporis et spiritus The Union of the Body and the Spirit 16 Epitome Dindimi in philosophiam Epitome of Dindimus on Philosophy 17 Practica Geometriae The Practice of Geometry 17 De Grammatica On Grammar 17 Soliloquium de Arrha Animae The Soliloquy on the Earnest Money of the Soul 18 De contemplatione et ejus speciebus On Contemplation and its Forms This is one of the earliest systematic works devoted to contemplation It appears not to have been written by Hugh himself but composed by one of his students possibly from classnotes from his lectures 19 On Sacred Scripture and its Authors 20 Various other treatises exist whose authorship by Hugh is uncertain Six of these are reprinted in Latin in Roger Baron ed Hugues de Saint Victor Six Opuscules Spirituels Sources chretiennes 155 Paris 1969 They are De meditatione 21 De verbo Dei De substantia dilectionis Quid vere diligendus est De quinque septenis 22 and De septem donis Spiritus sancti 23 De anima is a treatise of the soul the text will be found in the edition of Hugh s works in the Patrologia Latina of J P Migne Part of it was paraphrased in the West Mercian dialect of Middle English by the author of the Katherine Group 24 Various other works were wrongly attributed to Hugh in later thought One such particularly influential work was the Exposition of the Rule of St Augustine now accepted to be from the Victorine school but not by Hugh of St Victor 25 A new edition of Hugh s works has been started The first publication is Hugonis de Sancto Victore De sacramentis Christiane fidei ed Rainer Berndt Munster Aschendorff 2008 Philosophy and theology EditThe early Didascalicon was an elementary encyclopedic approach to God and Christ in which Hugh avoided controversial subjects and focused on what he took to be commonplaces of Catholic Christianity In it he outlined three types of philosophy or science scientia that can help mortals improve themselves and advance toward God theoretical philosophy theology mathematics physics provides them with truth practical philosophy ethics economics politics aids them in becoming virtuous and prudent and mechanical or illiberal philosophy e g carpentry agriculture medicine yields physical benefits A fourth philosophy logic is preparatory to the others and exists to ensure clear and proper conclusions in them Hugh s deeply mystical bent did not prevent him from seeing philosophy as a useful tool for understanding the divine or from using it to argue on behalf of faith Hugh was heavily influenced by Augustine s exegesis of Genesis Divine Wisdom was the archetypal form of creation The creation of the world in six days was a mystery for man to contemplate perhaps even a sacrament God s forming order from chaos to make the world was a message to humans to rise up from their own chaos of ignorance and become creatures of Wisdom and therefore beauty This kind of mystical ethical interpretation was typical for Hugh who tended to find Genesis interesting for its moral lessons rather than as a literal account of events Along with Jesus the sacraments were divine gifts that God gave man to redeem himself though God could have used other means Hugh separated everything along the lines of opus creationis and opus restaurationis Opus Creationis was the works of the creation referring to God s creative activity the true good natures of things and the original state and destiny of humanity The opus restaurationis was that which dealt with the reasons for God sending Jesus and the consequences of that Hugh believed that God did not have to send Jesus and that He had other options open to Him Why he chose to send Jesus is a mystery we are to meditate on and is to be learned through revelation with the aid of philosophy to facilitate understanding Legacy EditWithin the Abbey of St Victor many scholars who followed him are often known as the School of St Victor Andrew of St Victor studied under Hugh 26 Others who probably entered the community too late to be directly educated by Hugh include Richard of Saint Victor and Godfrey 27 One of Hugh s ideals that did not take root in St Victor however was his embracing of science and philosophy as tools for approaching God citation needed His works are in hundreds of libraries all across Europe citation needed He is quoted in many other publications after his death citation needed and Bonaventure praises him in De reductione artium ad theologiam He was also an influence on the critic Erich Auerbach who cited this passage from Hugh of St Victor in his essay Philology and World Literature 28 It is therefore a source of great virtue for the practiced mind to learn bit by bit first to change about in visible and transitory things so that afterwards it may be able to leave them behind altogether The person who finds his homeland sweet is a tender beginner he to whom every soil is as his native one is already strong but he is perfect to whom the entire world is as a foreign place The tender soul has fixed his love on one spot in the world the strong person has extended his love to all places the perfect man has extinguished his Works EditModern editions Edit Latin textLatin texts of Hugh of St Victor are available in the Migne edition at Documenta Catholica Omnia http www documentacatholicaomnia eu 30 10 1096 1141 Hugo De S Victore html Henry Buttimer Hugonis de Sancto Victore Didascalicon De Studio Legendi Washington DC Catholic University Press 1939 Hugh of St Victor L oeuvre de Hugues de Saint Victor 1 De institutione novitiorum De virtute orandi De laude caritatis De arrha animae Latin text edited by H B Feiss amp P Sicard French translation by D Poirel H Rochais amp P Sicard Introduction notes and appendices by D Poirel Turnhout Brepols 1997 Hugues de Saint Victor L oeuvre de Hugues de Saint Victor 2 Super Canticum Mariae Pro Assumptione Virginis De beatae Mariae virginitate Egredietur virga Maria porta edited by B Jolles Turnhout Brepols 2000 Hugo de Sancto Victore De archa Noe Libellus de formatione arche ed Patricius Sicard CCCM vol 176 Hugonis de Sancto Victore Opera I Turnhout Brepols 2001 Hugo de Sancto Victore De tribus diebus ed Dominique Poirel CCCM vol 177 Hugonis de Sancto Victore Opera II Turnhout Brepols 2002 Hugo de Sancto Victore De sacramentis Christiane fidei ed Rainer Berndt Munster Aschendorff 2008 Hugo de Sancto Victore Super Ierarchiam Dionysii CCCM vol 178 Hugonis de Sancto Victore Opera III Turnhout Brepols forthcoming English translationsHugh of St Victor Explanation of the Rule of St Augustine translated by Aloysius Smith London 1911 Hugh of St Victor The Soul s Betrothal Gift translated by FS Taylor London 1945 translation of De Arrha Animae Hugh of St Victor On the sacraments of the Christian faith De sacramentis translated by Roy J Deferrari Cambridge MA Mediaeval Academy of America 1951 Hugh of Saint Victor Selected spiritual writings translated by a religious of C S M V with an introduction by Aelred Squire London Faber 1962 reprinted in Eugene Oregon Wipf amp Stock Publishers 2009 contains a translation of the first four books of De arca Noe morali and the first two of four books of De vanitate mundi The Didascalicon of Hugh of St Victor translated by Jerome Taylor New York and London Columbia U P 1961 reprinted 1991 translation of the Didascalicon Soliloquy on the Earnest Money of the Soul trans Kevin Herbert Milwaukee WI Marquette University Press 1984 translation of Soliloquium de Arrha Animae Hugh of St Victor Practica Geometriae trans Frederick A Homann Milwaukee Marquette University Press 1991 Hugh of St Victor extracts from Introductory Notes on the Scriptures and on the Scriptural Writers trans Denys Turner in Denys Turner Eros and Allegory Medieval Exegesis of the Song of Songs Kalamazoo MI Cistercian Publications 1995 265 274 Hugh of Saint Victor on the Sacraments of the Christian Faith trans Roy Deferrari Eugene Oregon Wipf amp Stock Publishers 2007 translation of De Sacramentis Christianae Fidei Boyd Taylor Coolman and Dale M Coulter eds Trinity and creation a selection of works of Hugh Richard and Adam of St Victor Turnhout Brepols 2010 includes translation of Hugh of St Victor On the Three Days and Sentences on Divinity Hugh Feiss ed On love a selection of works of Hugh Adam Achard Richard and Godfrey of St Victor Turnhout Brepols 2011 includes translations of The Praise of the Bridegroom On the Substance of Love On the Praise of Charity What Truly Should be Loved On the Four Degrees of Violent Love trans A B Kraebel and Soliloquy on the Betrothal Gift of the Soul Franklin T Harkins and Frans van Liere eds Interpretation of scripture theory A selection of works of Hugh Andrew Richard and Godfrey of St Victor and of Robert of Melun Turnhout Belgium Brepols 2012 contains translations of Didascalion on the study of reading introduced and translated by Franklin T Harkins On Sacred Scripture and its authors and The diligent examiner introduced and translated by Frans van Liere On the sacraments of the Christian faith prologues introduced and translated by Christopher P Evans See also EditArt of memory Principles where Hugh s Didascalicon and Chronica are referred to Hendrik Mande The Mystic Ark painting by HughReferences Edit Dominique Poirel Les origines germaniques de la pensee d Hugues de Saint Victor p 173 sqq Furnal J The Dialectic of Faith and Reason in Cornelio Fabro s Reading of Kierkegaard s Theology Theological Studies 2017 Vol 78 3 718 739 p 735 B McGinn The Growth of Mysticism 1994 p365 a b Catholic Encyclopedia Hugh of St Victor McGinn 1994 p365 gives around 1120 as the date A helpful though not necessarily complete list of Hugh s work along with modern editions and translations is printed in Hugh Feiss ed On Love 2010 pp15 20 Reprinted in PL 176 173 618 and in Hugonis de Sancto Victore De sacramentis Christiane fidei ed Rainer Berndt Munster Aschendorff 2008 There is an English translation in Hugh of St Victor On the sacraments of the Christian faith De sacramentis translated by Roy J Deferrari Cambridge MA Mediaeval Academy of America 1951 An English translation of the Prologues is made in Franklin T Harkins and Frans van Liere eds Interpretation of scripture theory A selection of works of Hugh Andrew Richard and Godfrey of St Victor and of Robert of Melun Turnhout Belgium Brepols 2012 pp253 268 The Latin text is in Henry Buttimer Hugonis de Sancto Victore Didascalicon De Studio Legendi Washington DC Catholic University Press 1939 An older English translation is in Jerome Taylor The Didascalicon of Hugh of St Victor New York Columbia University Press 1961 A more recent translation is Franklin T Harkins and Frans van Liere eds Interpretation of scripture theory A selection of works of Hugh Andrew Richard and Godfrey of St Victor and of Robert of Melun Turnhout Belgium Brepols 2012 pp61 202 These three treatises are printed in PL 176 617 740 An older edition of the Latin text is in PL 175 928A The modern edition is Hugonis de Sancto Victore Opera III Super Ierarchiam Dionysii Turnhout Brepols CCCM vol 178 David Luscombe The Commentary of Hugh of Saint Victor on the Celestial Hierarchy in T Boiadjiev G Kapriev and A Speer eds Die Dionysius Rezeption im Mittelalter Turnholt Brepols 2000 pp160 164 D Poirel Le chant dionysien du IXe au XIIe siecle in M Goullet and M Parisse eds Les historiens et le latin medieval Paris Publications de la Sorbonne 2001 pp151 176 For further commentary on this work see Rorem Paul 2008 The Early Latin Dionysius Eriugena and Hugh of St Victor Modern Theology 24 4 601 614 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0025 2008 00488 x Reprinted in PL 175 115A Reprinted in PL 176 A detailed study of this work exists in Dominique Porel Livre de la nature et debat trinitaire au XXe siecle Le De tribus diebus de Hugues de Saint Victor Turnhout Brepols 2002 169 198 Much of this introduction is summarised in the introduction to the English translation in Boyd Taylor Coolman and Dale M Coulter eds Trinity and creation a selection of works of Hugh Richard and Adam of St Victor Turnhout Brepols 2010 Reprinted in PL 176 845 856 Reprinted in PL 177 285 294 a b c Reprinted in Roger Baron ed Hugonis de Sancto Victore Opera Propaedeutica Notre Dame IN University of Notre Dame Press 1966 Reprinted in Muller Karl ed Hugo von St Victor Soliloquium de Arrha Animae Und De Vanitate Mundi Bonn A Marcus Une E Weber s Verlag 1913 There is an English translation in Soliloquy on the Earnest Money of the Soul trans Kevin Herbert Milwaukee WI Marquette University Press 1965 See Bernard McGinn The Growth of Mysticism 1994 pp384 390 Latin text Barthelemy Haureau Hugues de Saint Victor Paris 1859 pp 177 210 A French translation is in Roger Baron Hugues de Saint Victor La contemplation et ses especes Tournai Paris Desclee 1958 An English translation is in Franklin T Harkins and Frans van Liere eds Interpretation of scripture theory A selection of works of Hugh Andrew Richard and Godfrey of St Victor and of Robert of Melun Turnhout Belgium Brepols 2012 Printed in PL176 993 998 Printed in PL175 405 414 Printed in PL176 405 414 Eggebroten Anne Sawles Warde a retelling of De Anima for a female audience PDF Archived from the original PDF on 11 August 2011 Retrieved 23 December 2009 Thomas F Martin OSA Our Restless Heart The Augustinian Tradition 2003 p82 Berndt Rainer 2002 Andrew of Saint Victor In Andre Vauchez ed Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages James Clarke amp Co B McGinn The Growth of Mysticism 1994 p366 Erich Auerbach 2009 Damrosch David Melas Natalie Buthelezi Mbongiseni eds The Princeton Sourcebook in Comparative Literature Princeton Princeton University Press p 124 Further reading EditSicard P 2015 Iter Victorinum La tradition manuscrite des œuvres de Hugues et de Richard de Saint Victor Repertoire complementaire et etudes Bibliotheca Victorina 24 Turnhout Brepols Publishers 2015 ISBN 978 2 503 55492 1 Acton Institute 1992 In the Liberal Tradition Hugh of St Victor 1096 1141 Religion and Liberty 2 1 Jan Feb 1992 Coolman Boyd Taylor 2010 The Theology of Hugh of St Victor An Interpretation Cambridge Cambridge University Press Evans G R 2002 Fifty Key Medieval Thinkers London Routledge Harkins Franklin T Reading and the Work of Restoration History and Scripture in the Theology of Hugh of St Victor Brepols 2009 Illich Ivan 1993 In the Vineyard of the Text a Commentary to Hugh s Didascalicon Chicago University of Chicago Press Luscombe David The Commentary of Hugh of Saint Victor on the Celestial Hierarchy in T Boiadjiev G Kapriev and A Speer eds Die Dionysius Rezeption im Mittelalter Turnholt Brepols 2000 McGinn Bernard The Growth of Mysticism 1994 pp 370 395 Moore R 1998 Jews and Christians in the Life and Thought of Hugh of St Victor USF Rorem Paul 2009 Hugh of Saint Victor Oxford New York Oxford University Press Rudolph Conrad First I Find the Center Point Reading the Text of Hugh of Saint Victor s The Mystic Ark 2004 Wilson R M ed 1938 Sawles Warde an early Middle English homily edited from the Bodley Royal and Cotton MSS Leeds University of Leeds School of English Language Conrad Rudolph The Mystic Ark Hugh of Saint Victor Art and Thought in the Twelfth Century 2014 External links EditLewis E 213 Rule of Saint Augustine Sermon on Matthew 25 6 at OPenn Hugh of St Victor in New Advent Latin texts of Hugh of St Victor are available in the Migne edition at Documenta Catholica Omnia http www documentacatholicaomnia eu 1815 1875 Migne Patrologia Latina 03 Rerum Conspectus Pro Auctoribus Ordinatus MLT H html Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Hugh of St Victor Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hugh of Saint Victor amp oldid 1158699508, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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