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Rota Fortunae

In medieval and ancient philosophy the Wheel of Fortune, or Rota Fortunae, is a symbol of the capricious nature of Fate. The wheel belongs to the goddess Fortuna (Greek equivalent Tyche) who spins it at random, changing the positions of those on the wheel: some suffer great misfortune, others gain windfalls. The metaphor was already a cliché in ancient times, complained about by Tacitus, but was greatly popularized for the Middle Ages by its extended treatment in the Consolation of Philosophy by Boethius from around 520. It became a common image in manuscripts of the book, and then other media, where Fortuna, often blindfolded, turns a large wheel of the sort used in watermills, to which kings and other powerful figures are attached.

From an edition of Boccaccio's De Casibus Virorum Illustrium showing Lady Fortune spinning her wheel.

Origins Edit

 
The "Queen of Fortune", helped by four other personifications, turns her wheel.

The origin of the word is from the "wheel of fortune"—the zodiac, referring to the Celestial spheres of which the 8th holds the stars, and the 9th is where the signs of the zodiac are placed. The concept was first invented in Babylon and later developed by the ancient Greeks.

The concept somewhat resembles the Bhavacakra, or Wheel of Becoming, depicted throughout Ancient Indian art and literature, except that the earliest conceptions in the Roman and Greek world involve not a two-dimensional wheel but a three-dimensional sphere, a metaphor for the world. It was widely used in the Ptolemaic perception of the universe as the zodiac being a wheel with its "signs" constantly turning throughout the year and having effect on the world's fate (or fortune).

In the second century BC, the Roman tragedian Pacuvius wrote:

Fortunam insanam esse et caecam et brutam perhibent philosophi,

Saxoque instare in globoso praedicant volubili:
Id quo saxum inpulerit fors, eo cadere Fortunam autumant.
Caecam ob eam rem esse iterant, quia nihil cernat, quo sese adplicet;
Insanam autem esse aiunt, quia atrox, incerta instabilisque sit;
Brutam, quia dignum atque indignum nequeat internoscere.

Philosophers say that Fortune is insane and blind and stupid,
and they teach that she stands on a rolling, spherical rock:
they affirm that, wherever chance pushes that rock, Fortuna falls in that direction.
They repeat that she is blind for this reason: that she does not see where she's heading;
they say she's insane, because she is cruel, flaky and unstable;

stupid, because she can't distinguish between the worthy and the unworthy.

— Pacuvius, Scaenicae Romanorum Poesis Fragmenta. Vol. 1, ed. O. Ribbeck, 1897

The idea of the rolling ball of fortune became a literary topos and was used frequently in declamation. In fact, the Rota Fortunae became a prime example of a trite topos or meme for Tacitus, who mentions its rhetorical overuse in the Dialogus de oratoribus.

 
Ptolemaic model of the spheres for Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn with epicycle, eccentric deferent and equant point. Georg von Peuerbach, Theoricae novae planetarum, 1474.

In the second century AD, astronomer and astrologer Vettius Valens wrote:

There are many wheels, most moving from west to east, but some move from east to west.
Seven wheels, each hold one heavenly object, the first holds the moon...
Then the eighth wheel holds all the stars that we see...
And the ninth wheel, the wheel of fortunes, moves from east to west,
and includes each of the twelve signs of fortune, the twelve signs of the zodiac.
Each wheel is inside the other, like an onion's peel sits inside another peel, and there is no empty space between them.[This quote needs a citation]
 
Illustration by Jean Miélot to Christine de Pizan's Epitre d'Othéa; Les Sept Sacrements de l'Eglise, c. 1455 at Waddesdon Manor

Boethius Edit

The goddess and her Wheel were eventually absorbed into Western medieval thought. The Roman philosopher Boethius (c. 480–524) played a key role,[4] utilizing both her and her Wheel in his Consolatio Philosophiae. For example, from the first chapter of the second book:

I know the manifold deceits of that monstrous lady, Fortune; in particular, her fawning friendship with those whom she intends to cheat, until the moment when she unexpectedly abandons them, and leaves them reeling in agony beyond endurance.

[...]

Having entrusted yourself to Fortune's dominion, you must conform to your mistress's ways. What, are you trying to halt the motion of her whirling wheel? Dimmest of fools that you are, you must realize that if the wheel stops turning, it ceases to be the course of chance."[5]

In the middle ages Edit

 
The Wheel of Fortune by Edward Burne-Jones, 1875–1883

Religious instruction Edit

The Wheel was widely used as an allegory in medieval literature and art to aid religious instruction. Though classically Fortune's Wheel could be favourable and disadvantageous, medieval writers preferred to concentrate on the tragic aspect, dwelling on downfall of the mighty – serving to remind people of the temporality of earthly things. In the morality play Everyman (c. 1495), for instance, Death comes unexpectedly to claim the protagonist. Fortune's Wheel has spun Everyman low, and Good Deeds, which he previously neglected, are needed to secure his passage to heaven.

Geoffrey Chaucer used the concept of the tragic Wheel of Fortune a great deal. It forms the basis for the Monk's Tale, which recounts stories of the great brought low throughout history, including Lucifer, Adam, Samson, Hercules, Nebuchadnezzar, Belshazzar, Nero, Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar and, in the following passage, Peter I of Cyprus.

O noble Peter, Cyprus' lord and king,
Which Alexander won by mastery,
To many a heathen ruin did'st thou bring;
For this thy lords had so much jealousy,
That, for no crime save thy high chivalry,
All in thy bed they slew thee on a morrow.
And thus does Fortune's wheel turn treacherously
And out of happiness bring men to sorrow.

~ Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales(circa 1400 A.D.), The Monk's Tale[6]

Fortune's Wheel often turns up in medieval art, from manuscripts to the great Rose windows in many medieval cathedrals, which are based on the Wheel. Characteristically, it has four shelves, or stages of life, with four human figures, usually labeled on the left regnabo (I shall reign), on the top regno (I reign) and is usually crowned, descending on the right regnavi (I have reigned) and the lowly figure on the bottom is marked sum sine regno (I am without a kingdom). Dante employed the Wheel in the Inferno and a "Wheel of Fortune" trump-card appeared in the Tarot deck (circa 1440, Italy).

Political instruction Edit

 
The wheel of fortune from the Burana Codex; The figures are labelled "Regno, Regnavi, Sum sine regno, Regnabo": I reign, I reigned, I have no kingdom, I shall reign

In the medieval and renaissance period, a popular genre of writing was "Mirrors for Princes", which set out advice for the ruling classes on how to wield power (the most famous being The Prince by Niccolò Machiavelli). Such political treatises could use the concept of the Wheel of Fortune as an instructive guide to their readers. John Lydgate's Fall of Princes, written for his patron Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester is a noteworthy example.

Many Arthurian romances of the era also use the concept of the Wheel in this manner, often placing the Nine Worthies on it at various points.

...fortune is so variant, and the wheel so moveable, there nis none constant abiding, and that may be proved by many old chronicles, of noble Hector, and Troilus, and Alisander, the mighty conqueror, and many mo other; when they were most in their royalty, they alighted lowest. ~ Lancelot in Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, Chapter XVII.[7]

Like the Mirrors for Princes, this could be used to convey advice to readers. For instance, in most romances, Arthur's greatest military achievement – the conquest of the Roman Empire – is placed late on in the overall story. However, in Malory's work the Roman conquest and high point of King Arthur's reign is established very early on. Thus, everything that follows is something of a decline. Arthur, Lancelot and the other Knights of the Round Table are meant to be the paragons of chivalry, yet in Malory's telling of the story they are doomed to failure. In medieval thinking, only God was perfect, and even a great figure like King Arthur had to be brought low. For the noble reader of the tale in the Middle Ages, this moral could serve as a warning, but also as something to aspire to. Malory could be using the concept of Fortune's Wheel to imply that if even the greatest of chivalric knights made mistakes, then a normal fifteenth-century noble didn't have to be a paragon of virtue in order to be a good knight.

Carmina Burana Edit

The Wheel of Fortune motif appears significantly in the Carmina Burana (or Burana Codex), albeit with a postclassical phonetic spelling of the genitive form Fortunae. Excerpts from two of the collection's better known poems, "Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi (Fortune, Empress of the World)" and "Fortune Plango Vulnera (I Bemoan the Wounds of Fortune)," read:

Later usage Edit

Fortune and her Wheel have remained an enduring image throughout history. Fortune's wheel can also be found in Thomas More's Utopia.

Shakespeare Edit

 
Wheel of fortune in Sebastian Brant`s Narrenschiff, woodcut by A. Dürer

William Shakespeare in Hamlet wrote of the "slings and arrows of outrageous fortune" and, of fortune personified, to "break all the spokes and fellies from her wheel." And in Henry V, Act 3 Scene VI[8] are the lines:

Pistol:
Bardolph, a soldier firm and sound of heart
And of buxom valor, hath by cruel fate
And giddy Fortune's furious fickle wheel
That goddess blind,
That stands upon the rolling restless stone—
Fluellen:
By your patience, Aunchient Pistol. Fortune is painted blind, with a muffler afore his eyes, to signify to you that Fortune is blind; and she is painted also with a wheel, to signify to you, which is the moral of it, that she is turning, and inconstant, and mutability, and variation. And her foot, look you, is fixed upon a spherical stone, which rolls, and rolls, and rolls.
Pistol:
Fortune is Bardolph's foe, and frowns on him;

Shakespeare also references this Wheel in King Lear. The Earl of Kent, who was once held dear by the King, has been banished, only to return in disguise. This disguised character is placed in the stocks for an overnight and laments this turn of events at the end of Act II, Scene 2:[9]

Fortune, good night, smile once more; turn thy wheel!

In Act IV, scene vii, King Lear also contrasts his misery on the "wheel of fire" to Cordelia's "soul in bliss".

Rosalind and Celia also discuss Fortune, especially as it stands opposed to Nature, in As You Like It, Act I, scene ii.

Victorian era Edit

In Anthony Trollope's novel The Way We Live Now, the character Lady Carbury writes a novel entitled The Wheel of Fortune about a heroine who suffers great financial hardships.

References Edit

  1. ^ "statuette of Fortuna". Hunterian Museum & Art Gallery Collections: GLAHM F.43. University of Glasgow. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
  2. ^ "Roman statuette of Fortuna". BBC - A History of the World. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  3. ^ MacDonald, James (1897). Tituli Hunteriani: An Account of the Roman Stones in the Hunterian Museum, University of Glasgow. Glasgow: T. & R. Annan & Sons. pp. 90–91. Retrieved 11 October 2017.
  4. ^ Patch, Howard Rollin (1927). The Goddess Fortuna in Medieval Literature. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674183780.
  5. ^ Boethius (2008). The Consolation of Philosophy. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 19–20. ISBN 978-0-19-954054-9.
  6. ^ "The Monk's Tale, Modern English – Canterbury Tales – Geoffrey Chaucer (1340?–1400)". Classiclit.about.com. 2009-11-02. Retrieved 2011-11-24.
  7. ^ . Worldwideschool.org. Archived from the original on 2016-04-11. Retrieved 2011-11-24.
  8. ^ "King Henry V by William Shakespeare: Act 3. Scene VI". Online-literature.com. 2007-01-26. Retrieved 2011-11-24.
  9. ^ "Act II. Scene II. King Lear. Craig, W.J., ed. 1914. The Oxford Shakespeare". Bartleby.com. Retrieved 2011-11-24.

rota, fortunae, game, show, wheel, fortune, game, show, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, relev. For the U S game show see Wheel of Fortune U S game show This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rota Fortunae news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Rota Fortunae news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message In medieval and ancient philosophy the Wheel of Fortune or Rota Fortunae is a symbol of the capricious nature of Fate The wheel belongs to the goddess Fortuna Greek equivalent Tyche who spins it at random changing the positions of those on the wheel some suffer great misfortune others gain windfalls The metaphor was already a cliche in ancient times complained about by Tacitus but was greatly popularized for the Middle Ages by its extended treatment in the Consolation of Philosophy by Boethius from around 520 It became a common image in manuscripts of the book and then other media where Fortuna often blindfolded turns a large wheel of the sort used in watermills to which kings and other powerful figures are attached From an edition of Boccaccio s De Casibus Virorum Illustrium showing Lady Fortune spinning her wheel Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Boethius 2 In the middle ages 2 1 Religious instruction 2 2 Political instruction 2 3 Carmina Burana 3 Later usage 3 1 Shakespeare 3 2 Victorian era 4 ReferencesOrigins Edit The Queen of Fortune helped by four other personifications turns her wheel The origin of the word is from the wheel of fortune the zodiac referring to the Celestial spheres of which the 8th holds the stars and the 9th is where the signs of the zodiac are placed The concept was first invented in Babylon and later developed by the ancient Greeks The concept somewhat resembles the Bhavacakra or Wheel of Becoming depicted throughout Ancient Indian art and literature except that the earliest conceptions in the Roman and Greek world involve not a two dimensional wheel but a three dimensional sphere a metaphor for the world It was widely used in the Ptolemaic perception of the universe as the zodiac being a wheel with its signs constantly turning throughout the year and having effect on the world s fate or fortune In the second century BC the Roman tragedian Pacuvius wrote Fortunam insanam esse et caecam et brutam perhibent philosophi Saxoque instare in globoso praedicant volubili Id quo saxum inpulerit fors eo cadere Fortunam autumant Caecam ob eam rem esse iterant quia nihil cernat quo sese adplicet Insanam autem esse aiunt quia atrox incerta instabilisque sit Brutam quia dignum atque indignum nequeat internoscere Philosophers say that Fortune is insane and blind and stupid and they teach that she stands on a rolling spherical rock they affirm that wherever chance pushes that rock Fortuna falls in that direction They repeat that she is blind for this reason that she does not see where she s heading they say she s insane because she is cruel flaky and unstable stupid because she can t distinguish between the worthy and the unworthy Pacuvius Scaenicae Romanorum Poesis Fragmenta Vol 1 ed O Ribbeck 1897 The idea of the rolling ball of fortune became a literary topos and was used frequently in declamation In fact the Rota Fortunae became a prime example of a trite topos or meme for Tacitus who mentions its rhetorical overuse in the Dialogus de oratoribus Ptolemaic model of the spheres for Venus Mars Jupiter and Saturn with epicycle eccentric deferent and equant point Georg von Peuerbach Theoricae novae planetarum 1474 In the second century AD astronomer and astrologer Vettius Valens wrote There are many wheels most moving from west to east but some move from east to west Seven wheels each hold one heavenly object the first holds the moon Then the eighth wheel holds all the stars that we see dd And the ninth wheel the wheel of fortunes moves from east to west and includes each of the twelve signs of fortune the twelve signs of the zodiac Each wheel is inside the other like an onion s peel sits inside another peel and there is no empty space between them This quote needs a citation dd Illustration by Jean Mielot to Christine de Pizan s Epitre d Othea Les Sept Sacrements de l Eglise c 1455 at Waddesdon Manor Statuette 1 of the Roman god Fortuna with gubernaculum ship s rudder 2 Rota Fortunae wheel of fortune and cornucopia horn of plenty found near the altar at Castlecary in 1771 3 Boethius Edit The goddess and her Wheel were eventually absorbed into Western medieval thought The Roman philosopher Boethius c 480 524 played a key role 4 utilizing both her and her Wheel in his Consolatio Philosophiae For example from the first chapter of the second book I know the manifold deceits of that monstrous lady Fortune in particular her fawning friendship with those whom she intends to cheat until the moment when she unexpectedly abandons them and leaves them reeling in agony beyond endurance Having entrusted yourself to Fortune s dominion you must conform to your mistress s ways What are you trying to halt the motion of her whirling wheel Dimmest of fools that you are you must realize that if the wheel stops turning it ceases to be the course of chance 5 In the middle ages Edit The Wheel of Fortune by Edward Burne Jones 1875 1883Religious instruction Edit The Wheel was widely used as an allegory in medieval literature and art to aid religious instruction Though classically Fortune s Wheel could be favourable and disadvantageous medieval writers preferred to concentrate on the tragic aspect dwelling on downfall of the mighty serving to remind people of the temporality of earthly things In the morality play Everyman c 1495 for instance Death comes unexpectedly to claim the protagonist Fortune s Wheel has spun Everyman low and Good Deeds which he previously neglected are needed to secure his passage to heaven Geoffrey Chaucer used the concept of the tragic Wheel of Fortune a great deal It forms the basis for the Monk s Tale which recounts stories of the great brought low throughout history including Lucifer Adam Samson Hercules Nebuchadnezzar Belshazzar Nero Alexander the Great Julius Caesar and in the following passage Peter I of Cyprus O noble Peter Cyprus lord and king Which Alexander won by mastery To many a heathen ruin did st thou bring For this thy lords had so much jealousy That for no crime save thy high chivalry All in thy bed they slew thee on a morrow And thus does Fortune s wheel turn treacherously And out of happiness bring men to sorrow Geoffrey Chaucer The Canterbury Tales circa 1400 A D The Monk s Tale 6 Fortune s Wheel often turns up in medieval art from manuscripts to the great Rose windows in many medieval cathedrals which are based on the Wheel Characteristically it has four shelves or stages of life with four human figures usually labeled on the left regnabo I shall reign on the top regno I reign and is usually crowned descending on the right regnavi I have reigned and the lowly figure on the bottom is marked sum sine regno I am without a kingdom Dante employed the Wheel in the Inferno and a Wheel of Fortune trump card appeared in the Tarot deck circa 1440 Italy Political instruction Edit The wheel of fortune from the Burana Codex The figures are labelled Regno Regnavi Sum sine regno Regnabo I reign I reigned I have no kingdom I shall reignIn the medieval and renaissance period a popular genre of writing was Mirrors for Princes which set out advice for the ruling classes on how to wield power the most famous being The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli Such political treatises could use the concept of the Wheel of Fortune as an instructive guide to their readers John Lydgate s Fall of Princes written for his patron Humphrey Duke of Gloucester is a noteworthy example Many Arthurian romances of the era also use the concept of the Wheel in this manner often placing the Nine Worthies on it at various points fortune is so variant and the wheel so moveable there nis none constant abiding and that may be proved by many old chronicles of noble Hector and Troilus and Alisander the mighty conqueror and many mo other when they were most in their royalty they alighted lowest Lancelot in Thomas Malory s Le Morte d Arthur Chapter XVII 7 Like the Mirrors for Princes this could be used to convey advice to readers For instance in most romances Arthur s greatest military achievement the conquest of the Roman Empire is placed late on in the overall story However in Malory s work the Roman conquest and high point of King Arthur s reign is established very early on Thus everything that follows is something of a decline Arthur Lancelot and the other Knights of the Round Table are meant to be the paragons of chivalry yet in Malory s telling of the story they are doomed to failure In medieval thinking only God was perfect and even a great figure like King Arthur had to be brought low For the noble reader of the tale in the Middle Ages this moral could serve as a warning but also as something to aspire to Malory could be using the concept of Fortune s Wheel to imply that if even the greatest of chivalric knights made mistakes then a normal fifteenth century noble didn t have to be a paragon of virtue in order to be a good knight Carmina Burana Edit The Wheel of Fortune motif appears significantly in the Carmina Burana or Burana Codex albeit with a postclassical phonetic spelling of the genitive form Fortunae Excerpts from two of the collection s better known poems Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi Fortune Empress of the World and Fortune Plango Vulnera I Bemoan the Wounds of Fortune read Sors immanis et inanis rota tu volubilis status malus vana salus semper dissolubilis obumbrata et velata michi quoque niteris nunc per ludum dorsum nudum fero tui sceleris Fortune rota volvitur descendo minoratus alter in altum tollitur nimis exaltatus rex sedet in vertice caveat ruinam nam sub axe legimus Hecubam reginam Fate monstrous and empty you whirling wheel status is bad well being is vain always may melt away shadowy and veiled you plague me too now through the game bare backed I bear your villainy The wheel of Fortune turns I go down demeaned another is carried to the height far too high up sits the king at the summit let him beware ruin for under the axle we read Queen Hecuba Later usage EditFortune and her Wheel have remained an enduring image throughout history Fortune s wheel can also be found in Thomas More s Utopia Shakespeare Edit Wheel of fortune in Sebastian Brant s Narrenschiff woodcut by A DurerWilliam Shakespeare in Hamlet wrote of the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune and of fortune personified to break all the spokes and fellies from her wheel And in Henry V Act 3 Scene VI 8 are the lines Pistol Bardolph a soldier firm and sound of heart And of buxom valor hath by cruel fate And giddy Fortune s furious fickle wheel That goddess blind That stands upon the rolling restless stone Fluellen By your patience Aunchient Pistol Fortune is painted blind with a muffler afore his eyes to signify to you that Fortune is blind and she is painted also with a wheel to signify to you which is the moral of it that she is turning and inconstant and mutability and variation And her foot look you is fixed upon a spherical stone which rolls and rolls and rolls Pistol Fortune is Bardolph s foe and frowns on him Shakespeare also references this Wheel in King Lear The Earl of Kent who was once held dear by the King has been banished only to return in disguise This disguised character is placed in the stocks for an overnight and laments this turn of events at the end of Act II Scene 2 9 Fortune good night smile once more turn thy wheel In Act IV scene vii King Lear also contrasts his misery on the wheel of fire to Cordelia s soul in bliss Rosalind and Celia also discuss Fortune especially as it stands opposed to Nature in As You Like It Act I scene ii Victorian era Edit In Anthony Trollope s novel The Way We Live Now the character Lady Carbury writes a novel entitled The Wheel of Fortune about a heroine who suffers great financial hardships References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wheel of Fortune statuette of Fortuna Hunterian Museum amp Art Gallery Collections GLAHM F 43 University of Glasgow Retrieved 13 October 2017 Roman statuette of Fortuna BBC A History of the World Retrieved 12 October 2017 MacDonald James 1897 Tituli Hunteriani An Account of the Roman Stones in the Hunterian Museum University of Glasgow Glasgow T amp R Annan amp Sons pp 90 91 Retrieved 11 October 2017 Patch Howard Rollin 1927 The Goddess Fortuna in Medieval Literature Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674183780 Boethius 2008 The Consolation of Philosophy Oxford Oxford University Press pp 19 20 ISBN 978 0 19 954054 9 The Monk s Tale Modern English Canterbury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer 1340 1400 Classiclit about com 2009 11 02 Retrieved 2011 11 24 Le Morte d Arthur Chapter XVII Worldwideschool org Archived from the original on 2016 04 11 Retrieved 2011 11 24 King Henry V by William Shakespeare Act 3 Scene VI Online literature com 2007 01 26 Retrieved 2011 11 24 Act II Scene II King Lear Craig W J ed 1914 The Oxford Shakespeare Bartleby com Retrieved 2011 11 24 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rota Fortunae amp oldid 1172350771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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