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Prosper of Aquitaine

Prosper of Aquitaine (Latin: Prosper Aquitanus; c. 390c. 455 AD), a Christian writer and disciple of Augustine of Hippo, was the first continuator of Jerome's Universal Chronicle.

Life edit

Prosper was a native of Aquitaine,[3] and may have been educated at Bordeaux. By 417 he arrived in Marseilles as a refugee from Aquitaine in the aftermath of the Gothic invasions of Gaul. In 429 he was corresponding with Augustine.[4] In 431 he appeared in Rome to appeal to Pope Celestine I regarding the teachings of Augustine; there is no further trace of him until 440, the first year of the pontificate of Pope Leo I, who had been in Gaul, where he may have met Prosper. In any case Prosper was soon in Rome, attached to the pope in some secretarial or notarial capacity. Gennadius of Massilia's De viris illustribus (lxxxiv, 89) repeats the tradition that Prosper dictated the famous letters of Leo I against Eutyches. The date of his death is not known, but his chronicle goes as far as 455, and the fact that the chronicler Marcellinus mentions him under the year 463 seems to indicate that his death was shortly after that date.

Prosper was a layman, but he threw himself with ardour into the religious controversies of his day, defending Augustine and propagating orthodoxy. In his De vocatione omnium gentium ("The Call of all Nations"),[5] in which the issues of the call to the Gentiles is discussed in the light of Augustine's doctrine of Grace, Prosper appears as the first of the medieval Augustinians.

The Pelagians were attacked in a glowing polemical poem of about 1000 lines, Adversus ingratos, written about 430. The theme, dogma quod ... pestifero vomuit coluber sermone Britannus, is relieved by a treatment not lacking in liveliness and in classical measures. After Augustine's death he wrote three series of Augustinian defences, especially against Vincent of Lérins (Pro Augustino responsiones).

His chief work was his De gratia Dei et libero arbitrio (432), written against John Cassian's Collatio. He also induced Pope Celestine to publish an open letter to the bishops of Gaul, Epistola ad episcopos Gallorum against some members of the Gaulish Church. He had earlier opened a correspondence with Augustine, along with his friend Hilary (not Hilary of Arles), and although he did not meet him personally, his enthusiasm for the great theologian led him to make an abridgment of his commentary on the Psalms, as well as a collection of sentences from his works—probably the first dogmatic compilation of that class in which Peter Lombard's Liber sententiarum is the best-known example. He also put into elegiac metre, in 106 epigrams, some of Augustine's theological dicta.

Far more important historically than these is Prosper's Epitoma chronicon (covering the period 379–455) which Prosper first composed in 433 and updated several times, finally in 455. It was circulated in numerous manuscripts and was soon continued by other hands, whose beginning dates identify Prosper's various circulated editions.[6] The Encyclopædia Britannica 1911 found it a careless compilation from Jerome in the earlier part, and from other writers in the later,[7] but that the lack of other sources makes it very valuable for the period from 425 to 455, which is drawn from Prosper's personal experience. Compared with his continuators, Prosper gives detailed coverage of political events. He covers Attila's invasions of Gaul (451) and Italy (452) in lengthy entries under their respective years. Though he was a poet himself, the sole secular writer Prosper mentions is Claudian. There were five different editions, the last of them dating from 455, just after the death of Valentinian III. For a long time the Chronicon imperiale was also attributed to "Prosper Tiro", but without the slightest justification. It is entirely independent of the real Prosper, and in parts even shows Pelagian tendencies and sympathies.

Writings edit

Prosper of Aquitaine's most influential writings are admired for their classical qualities, but have been criticized for being flat and dull.[8] His writings come mostly from the second quarter of the fifth century.

De vocatione omnium gentium (Calling of All Nations)

This was Prosper's attempt to reconcile Augustine of Hippo's teaching on grace in which he suggests that God wishes all men to be saved. The argument is that although all human beings do not receive the grace that saves, they do receive God's general grace. Written in AD 450, the Calling of All Nations was Prosper's most original contribution to theology.

Epitoma Chronicon

This was Prosper's version of the history of the World. In it he sought to give his own version of the Pelagian controversy and in his own interpretation of recent history.[9] The Epitoma Chronicon ends in 455.

Capitulla

This was a simple list of ten doctrinal points asserting the efficacy and necessity of God's Grace, each separately supported by papal statements. It was a strong defense of an essential Augustinian doctrine, but most moderate one to its date.[10] Prosper did not mention Augustine's name in the doctrine, but also did not reject any of his thoughts on predestination. It was written between 435 and 442.

Sententia and Epigrammata

The Sententia was a collection of 392 maxims drawn up against the writings of Augustine of Hippo. The epigrammata was a compilation of 106 epigrams of florilegium in verse. Both were intended to be used as handbooks for the serious Christian, drawn from an Augustinian point of view. The work was devoted to the discussion of doctrines of grace and the incarnation. The motto of the florilegia was monastically influenced, urging the reader to patience through adversity, exercise of virtue, and constant striving to perfection.[10]

Liber contra Collatorem

This writing represents the final opinion of Prosper on the problem of necessity of grace. It was written during the reign of Pope Sixtus III (link) and is a step-by step response to Conference XIII of the Conlationes of John Cassian.[11]

Carmen de Providentia Divina (Poem on Divine Providence)

The problem of providence is discussed in the context of God's creation of the World and in relation to the invasion of Gaul by the Vandals and the Goths. This work has been attributed to Prosper of Aquitaine in the past, but this theory has been discredited.[12]

Legacy edit

"Prosper of Aquitaine was much more famous for what he wrote than for what he did." (Abbé L. Valentin) However, many historians believe his chief fame rests not on his historical work, but on his activities as a theologian and an aggressive propagator of the Augustinian doctrine of grace.[13] It is no doubt that Prosper holds a place in the ranks of the moulders of theological understanding of the doctrine of grace.[14]

Most of his works were aimed at defending and distribution Augustine's teachings, especially those pertaining to grace and free will. Following Augustine's death in 430, Prosper continued to disseminate his teachings and spent his life working to make them acceptable. Prosper was the first chronicler to add to Jerome's account, beginning his continuation half a century later. Prosper's epigrams became most popular in his later years, providing a method for students of Christianity to learn moral lessons and aspects of the Augustinian doctrine.

Prosper also played a vital role in the Pelagian controversy in southern Gaul in the 420's. With the help of Augustine and Pope Celestine, Prosper was able to put down revolutions of the Pelagian Christians.

Prosper's works were very popular during the Middle Ages: the Epigrams alone sum no fewer than one hundred and eighty manuscripts.

Editions edit

Prosper's Epitoma Chronicon was edited by Theodor Mommsen in the Chronica minora of the Monumenta Germaniae Historica (1892) and by Maria Becker and Jan–Markus Kötter as part of the Kleine und fragmentarische Historiker (KFHist G 5) (2016). Prosper's complete works are in Migne's Patrologia Latina. vol. 51. The English translations include:

  • St. Prosper of Aquitaine. The Call of All Nations, translated and annotated by P. De Letter, SJ, 1952 (Ancient Christian Writers, 14). ISBN 9780809102532
  • Prosper of Aquitaine. Defense of St. Augustine, translated and annotated by P. De Letter, SJ, 1963 (Ancient Christian Writers, 32). ISBN 9780809102631

Prosper's Epitoma Chronicon is available in English translation in From Roman to Merovingian Gaul: A Reader ed. & trans. A. C Murray (Ontario, 2003) pp. 62–76.

Prosper's Epigrams were edited by Albertus G. A. Horsting in Prosper Aquitanus. Liber epigrammatum, Berlin-New York 2016 (Corpus scriptorum ecclesiasticorum Latinorum 100).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ St. Prosper of Aquitaine
  2. ^ St. Prosper of Aquitaine Oxford Index
  3. ^ He is called Prosper Tiro in several manuscripts of his Epitoma Chronicon. (Steven Muhlberger, "Prosper's Epitoma Chronicon: was there an edition of 443?" Classical Philology 81.3 (July 1986), pp. 240–244).
  4. ^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Tiro Prosper of Aquitaine" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  5. ^ Seventeenth-century doubts as to its authorship, attributing it to Pope Leo I, are not sustained by its most recent editor, De Letter (1952), nor by Joseph J. Young, Studies on the style of De vocatione omnium Gentium ascribed to Prosper of Aquitaine Patristic Studies, 87 (Catholic University of America) 1954.
  6. ^ Muhlberger, "Prosper's Epitoma Chronicon", p. 240
  7. ^ Prosper, born about 390, must have depended on other written sources for his earlier decades of Epitome chronicon but, aside from Augustine's De haeresibus and City of God and possibly Orosius, they continue to be elusive. (Dennis E. Trout, "The years 394 and 395 in the Epitome chronicon: Prosper, Augustine and Claudian" Classical Philology 86.1 (January 1991), pp. 43–47).
  8. ^ White, 113
  9. ^ Humphries, 156
  10. ^ a b Muhlberger, 51–52
  11. ^ Fathers of the Church, 337
  12. ^ White, 114
  13. ^ Muhlberger, 48
  14. ^ Fathers of the Church, 336

References edit

  • Arturo Elberti, Prospero d'Aquitania: Teologo e Discepolo (Rome, 1999).
  • Mark Humphries. "Chronicle and Chronology: Prosper of Aquitaine, his methods and the development of early medieval chronography." Early Medieval Europe 5 (1996) 155–175.
  • Steven Muhlberger, The Fifth Century Chroniclers (Great Britain: Redwood Press, 1990) pp. 48–60.
  • Alexander Hwang. Intrepid Lover of Perfect Grace: The Life and Thought of Prosper of Aquitaine. Washington: Catholic University of America Press, 2009.
  • Caroline White, Early Christian Latin Poets (New York, 2000) pp. 113–118.
  • The Fathers of the Church (New York: The Catholic University of America, 1949) pp. 335–343.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Prosper of Aquitaine". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Valentin, Louis (1900). Saint Prosper d'Aquitaine: Étude sur la littérature latine ecclésiastique au cinquième siècle en Gaule (in French). Paris: Alphonse Picard et fils. This work offers a complete list of previous writings on Prosper and is still the main reference.

External links edit

  • Tiro Prosper of Aquitaine article from The Catholic Encyclopedia (Newadvent Website)
  • Opera Omnia by Migne Patrologia Latina with analytical indexes
  • Carmen de ingratis et epigrammata selecta full text on Google Books

prosper, aquitaine, bishop, reggio, prosper, reggio, latin, prosper, aquitanus, christian, writer, disciple, augustine, hippo, first, continuator, jerome, universal, chronicle, saintbornc, roman, province, aquitainediedc, rome, praet, prefecture, italyvenerate. For the bishop of Reggio see Prosper of Reggio Prosper of Aquitaine Latin Prosper Aquitanus c 390 c 455 AD a Christian writer and disciple of Augustine of Hippo was the first continuator of Jerome s Universal Chronicle SaintProsper of AquitaineBornc 390 Roman province of AquitaineDiedc 455 Rome Praet prefecture of ItalyVenerated inRoman Catholic ChurchEastern Orthodox ChurchAnglican CommunionReformed Episcopal ChurchLutheranismFeast25 June 1 7 July 2 Contents 1 Life 2 Writings 3 Legacy 4 Editions 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksLife editProsper was a native of Aquitaine 3 and may have been educated at Bordeaux By 417 he arrived in Marseilles as a refugee from Aquitaine in the aftermath of the Gothic invasions of Gaul In 429 he was corresponding with Augustine 4 In 431 he appeared in Rome to appeal to Pope Celestine I regarding the teachings of Augustine there is no further trace of him until 440 the first year of the pontificate of Pope Leo I who had been in Gaul where he may have met Prosper In any case Prosper was soon in Rome attached to the pope in some secretarial or notarial capacity Gennadius of Massilia s De viris illustribus lxxxiv 89 repeats the tradition that Prosper dictated the famous letters of Leo I against Eutyches The date of his death is not known but his chronicle goes as far as 455 and the fact that the chronicler Marcellinus mentions him under the year 463 seems to indicate that his death was shortly after that date Prosper was a layman but he threw himself with ardour into the religious controversies of his day defending Augustine and propagating orthodoxy In his De vocatione omnium gentium The Call of all Nations 5 in which the issues of the call to the Gentiles is discussed in the light of Augustine s doctrine of Grace Prosper appears as the first of the medieval Augustinians The Pelagians were attacked in a glowing polemical poem of about 1000 lines Adversus ingratos written about 430 The theme dogma quod pestifero vomuit coluber sermone Britannus is relieved by a treatment not lacking in liveliness and in classical measures After Augustine s death he wrote three series of Augustinian defences especially against Vincent of Lerins Pro Augustino responsiones His chief work was his De gratia Dei et libero arbitrio 432 written against John Cassian s Collatio He also induced Pope Celestine to publish an open letter to the bishops of Gaul Epistola ad episcopos Gallorum against some members of the Gaulish Church He had earlier opened a correspondence with Augustine along with his friend Hilary not Hilary of Arles and although he did not meet him personally his enthusiasm for the great theologian led him to make an abridgment of his commentary on the Psalms as well as a collection of sentences from his works probably the first dogmatic compilation of that class in which Peter Lombard s Liber sententiarum is the best known example He also put into elegiac metre in 106 epigrams some of Augustine s theological dicta Far more important historically than these is Prosper s Epitoma chronicon covering the period 379 455 which Prosper first composed in 433 and updated several times finally in 455 It was circulated in numerous manuscripts and was soon continued by other hands whose beginning dates identify Prosper s various circulated editions 6 The Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911 found it a careless compilation from Jerome in the earlier part and from other writers in the later 7 but that the lack of other sources makes it very valuable for the period from 425 to 455 which is drawn from Prosper s personal experience Compared with his continuators Prosper gives detailed coverage of political events He covers Attila s invasions of Gaul 451 and Italy 452 in lengthy entries under their respective years Though he was a poet himself the sole secular writer Prosper mentions is Claudian There were five different editions the last of them dating from 455 just after the death of Valentinian III For a long time the Chronicon imperiale was also attributed to Prosper Tiro but without the slightest justification It is entirely independent of the real Prosper and in parts even shows Pelagian tendencies and sympathies Writings editProsper of Aquitaine s most influential writings are admired for their classical qualities but have been criticized for being flat and dull 8 His writings come mostly from the second quarter of the fifth century De vocatione omnium gentium Calling of All Nations This was Prosper s attempt to reconcile Augustine of Hippo s teaching on grace in which he suggests that God wishes all men to be saved The argument is that although all human beings do not receive the grace that saves they do receive God s general grace Written in AD 450 the Calling of All Nations was Prosper s most original contribution to theology Epitoma ChroniconThis was Prosper s version of the history of the World In it he sought to give his own version of the Pelagian controversy and in his own interpretation of recent history 9 The Epitoma Chronicon ends in 455 CapitullaThis was a simple list of ten doctrinal points asserting the efficacy and necessity of God s Grace each separately supported by papal statements It was a strong defense of an essential Augustinian doctrine but most moderate one to its date 10 Prosper did not mention Augustine s name in the doctrine but also did not reject any of his thoughts on predestination It was written between 435 and 442 Sententia and EpigrammataThe Sententia was a collection of 392 maxims drawn up against the writings of Augustine of Hippo The epigrammata was a compilation of 106 epigrams of florilegium in verse Both were intended to be used as handbooks for the serious Christian drawn from an Augustinian point of view The work was devoted to the discussion of doctrines of grace and the incarnation The motto of the florilegia was monastically influenced urging the reader to patience through adversity exercise of virtue and constant striving to perfection 10 Liber contra CollatoremThis writing represents the final opinion of Prosper on the problem of necessity of grace It was written during the reign of Pope Sixtus III link and is a step by step response to Conference XIII of the Conlationes of John Cassian 11 Carmen de Providentia Divina Poem on Divine Providence The problem of providence is discussed in the context of God s creation of the World and in relation to the invasion of Gaul by the Vandals and the Goths This work has been attributed to Prosper of Aquitaine in the past but this theory has been discredited 12 Legacy edit Prosper of Aquitaine was much more famous for what he wrote than for what he did Abbe L Valentin However many historians believe his chief fame rests not on his historical work but on his activities as a theologian and an aggressive propagator of the Augustinian doctrine of grace 13 It is no doubt that Prosper holds a place in the ranks of the moulders of theological understanding of the doctrine of grace 14 Most of his works were aimed at defending and distribution Augustine s teachings especially those pertaining to grace and free will Following Augustine s death in 430 Prosper continued to disseminate his teachings and spent his life working to make them acceptable Prosper was the first chronicler to add to Jerome s account beginning his continuation half a century later Prosper s epigrams became most popular in his later years providing a method for students of Christianity to learn moral lessons and aspects of the Augustinian doctrine Prosper also played a vital role in the Pelagian controversy in southern Gaul in the 420 s With the help of Augustine and Pope Celestine Prosper was able to put down revolutions of the Pelagian Christians Prosper s works were very popular during the Middle Ages the Epigrams alone sum no fewer than one hundred and eighty manuscripts Editions editProsper s Epitoma Chronicon was edited by Theodor Mommsen in the Chronica minora of the Monumenta Germaniae Historica 1892 and by Maria Becker and Jan Markus Kotter as part of the Kleine und fragmentarische Historiker KFHist G 5 2016 Prosper s complete works are in Migne s Patrologia Latina vol 51 The English translations include St Prosper of Aquitaine The Call of All Nations translated and annotated by P De Letter SJ 1952 Ancient Christian Writers 14 ISBN 9780809102532 Prosper of Aquitaine Defense of St Augustine translated and annotated by P De Letter SJ 1963 Ancient Christian Writers 32 ISBN 9780809102631Prosper s Epitoma Chronicon is available in English translation in From Roman to Merovingian Gaul A Reader ed amp trans A C Murray Ontario 2003 pp 62 76 Prosper s Epigrams were edited by Albertus G A Horsting in Prosper Aquitanus Liber epigrammatum Berlin New York 2016 Corpus scriptorum ecclesiasticorum Latinorum 100 See also editUncial 0208Notes edit St Prosper of Aquitaine St Prosper of Aquitaine Oxford Index He is called Prosper Tiro in several manuscripts of his Epitoma Chronicon Steven Muhlberger Prosper s Epitoma Chronicon was there an edition of 443 Classical Philology 81 3 July 1986 pp 240 244 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Tiro Prosper of Aquitaine Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Seventeenth century doubts as to its authorship attributing it to Pope Leo I are not sustained by its most recent editor De Letter 1952 nor by Joseph J Young Studies on the style of De vocatione omnium Gentium ascribed to Prosper of Aquitaine Patristic Studies 87 Catholic University of America 1954 Muhlberger Prosper s Epitoma Chronicon p 240 Prosper born about 390 must have depended on other written sources for his earlier decades of Epitome chronicon but aside from Augustine s De haeresibus and City of God and possibly Orosius they continue to be elusive Dennis E Trout The years 394 and 395 in the Epitome chronicon Prosper Augustine and Claudian Classical Philology 86 1 January 1991 pp 43 47 White 113 Humphries 156 a b Muhlberger 51 52 Fathers of the Church 337 White 114 Muhlberger 48 Fathers of the Church 336References editArturo Elberti Prospero d Aquitania Teologo e Discepolo Rome 1999 Mark Humphries Chronicle and Chronology Prosper of Aquitaine his methods and the development of early medieval chronography Early Medieval Europe 5 1996 155 175 Steven Muhlberger The Fifth Century Chroniclers Great Britain Redwood Press 1990 pp 48 60 Alexander Hwang Intrepid Lover of Perfect Grace The Life and Thought of Prosper of Aquitaine Washington Catholic University of America Press 2009 Caroline White Early Christian Latin Poets New York 2000 pp 113 118 The Fathers of the Church New York The Catholic University of America 1949 pp 335 343 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Prosper of Aquitaine Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Valentin Louis 1900 Saint Prosper d Aquitaine Etude sur la litterature latine ecclesiastique au cinquieme siecle en Gaule in French Paris Alphonse Picard et fils This work offers a complete list of previous writings on Prosper and is still the main reference External links editTiro Prosper of Aquitaine article from The Catholic Encyclopedia Newadvent Website Opera Omnia by Migne Patrologia Latina with analytical indexes Carmen de ingratis et epigrammata selecta full text on Google Books Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prosper of Aquitaine amp oldid 1181104737, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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