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Summa

Summa and its diminutive summula (plural summae and summulae, respectively) was a medieval didactics literary genre written in Latin, born during the 12th century, and popularized in 13th century Europe. In its simplest sense, they might be considered texts that 'sum up' knowledge in a field, such as the compendiums of theology, philosophy and canon law. Their function during the Middle Ages was largely as manuals or handbooks of necessary knowledge used by individuals who would not advance their studies any further.[1]

Features

It was a kind of encyclopedia that developed a matter about Law, Theology or Philosophy most of all. Matters were divided in a more detailed way as it was in the tractatus (treatise), since they were divided into quaestiones (questions) and these ones were also divided into articles. The articles had the following structure:

  1. Title of the article as a question and showing two different positions (disputatio).
  2. Objections or arguments against one of the alternatives, specially the one that defended the author.
  3. Arguments in favor of such an alternative, based on the Bible, the Holy Fathers and so on.
  4. Solution, that includes arguments that combine faith and reason and that express the author's thought.
  5. The sententia or answer to the question, that consists in the refutation of the initial objections against the author's solution.[2][3]

History

Some historians of theology cite Origen's peri archon as the first summary of Catholic theology. Others consider that the first in point of time is "De Trinitate" by St. Hilary of Poitiers. The distinction has also been accorded to Radulfus Ardens, an eleventh-century theologian and preacher, a native of Beaulieu, author of a comprehensive "Speculum Universale", still in Manuscript. In this wide sense of the word, however, the encyclopedic treatises of St. Isidore of Seville, Rabanus Maurus etc., entitled "De Etymologiis" or "De Universo" might also be considered to be summaries of theology and philosophy.

In the stricter sense of the word, "Summa" is applied to the more technical systematic compendiums which began to appear in the twelfth century. According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, the form was invented by the grammarian Peter Helias.[4] An alternative title is "Sentences" (Latin Libri Sententiarum), the diminutive, "Summulæ", being of later origin. What is peculiar to "summists" or "sententiaries", as the authors of these works are called, is the adoption of the method first suggested by Gerbert in his "De Rationali et Ratione Uti", and used by Abelard in his "Sic et Non", consisting in an exposition of contradictory views, the affirmative and negative. Progress towards the final form of the thirteenth-century "Summæ" is marked by the greater care which was taken, as time went on, to explain in a systematic manner the apparent contradiction among the conflicting opinions presented. Besides this method of exposition, the twelfth-century summists adopted dialectic definitely as a means of elucidating, not only philosophical, but also theological truth. Finally the summists adopted more or less unanimously a fixed division of the field of theology and philosophy, and adhered more or less closely to a definite order of topics. Here, of course, there was room for individual preferences in the matter of arrangement and sequence of problems, as we see when we compare with one another the "Summæ" even of the latest period of Scholasticism.

The first great summist was Peter Lombard (died 1160), author of the Books of Sentences and surnamed "Master of Sentences". The order of topics in the Books of Sentences is as follows: In the first place, the topics are divided into res and signa, or things and signs. "Things" are subdivided into: the object of our happiness, God — to this topic Peter devotes the first book; means of attaining this object, viz., creatures — the topic treated in the second book; virtues, men and angels, that is, special means of happiness and subjects of happiness — the topic of the third book; the fourth book is devoted to signs: the sacraments.

How far Peter Lombard was influenced by earlier summists, such as Robert Pullen, Hugh of St. Victor and the author of the "Summa Sententiarum" which was immediately inspired by Abelard's work, historians have not determined. It is generally admitted that the Lombard was not entirely original. He deserves his renown as the first great summist chiefly because, in spite of the opposition which his work met during his lifetime, its influence grew greater in time, until in the thirteenth century it was universally adopted as a text. Notwithstanding all that hostile critics of Scholasticism have said about the dryness and unattractiveness of the medieval "Summæ", these works have many merits from the point of view of pedagogy, and a philosophical school which supplements, as Scholasticism did, the compendious treatment of the "Summæ", with the looser form of treatment of the "Quæstiones Disputatæ" and the "Opuscula", unites in its method of writing the advantages which modern philosophy derives from the combination of textbook and doctor's dissertation. The Summa Theologica of St. Thomas Aquinas, begun when Aquinas was Regent Master at the studium provinciale at Santa Sabina the forerunner of the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum, is often considered the most perfect specimen of this kind of literature.

The term "Summulæ" was used, for the most part, to designate the logical compendiums which came to be adopted as texts in the schools during the thirteenth century. The best known of these is the "Summulæ Logicales" of Peter Hispanus, afterwards Pope John XXI.

Dominican works

Manuals of theology and more especially manuals, or summae, on penance for the use of confessors were composed in great numbers. The oldest Dominican commentaries on the "Sentences" are those of Roland of Cremona, Hugh of Saint Cher, Richard Fitzacre, Robert of Kilwardby and Albertus Magnus. The series begins with the year 1230 if not earlier and the last are prior to the middle of the thirteenth century.[5]

The "Summa" of St. Thomas (1265–75) is still the masterpiece of theology. The monumental work of Albertus Magnus is unfinished. The "Summa de bono" of Ulrich of Strasburg (d. 1277), a disciple of Albert is still unedited, but is of interest to the historian of the thought of the thirteenth century.[6] The theological summa of St. Antoninus is highly esteemed by moralists and economists.[7] The "Compendium theologicæ veritatis" of Hugh Ripelin of Strasburg (d. 1268) is the most widespread and famous manual of the Middle Ages.[8]

The chief manual of confessors is that of Paul of Hungary composed for the Brothers of St. Nicholas of Bologna (1220–21) and edited without mention of the author in the "Bibliotheca Casinensis"[9] and with false assignment of authorship by Raymund Duellius.[10] The "Summa de Poenitentia" of Raymond of Pennafort, composed in 1235, was a classic during the Middle Ages and was one of the works of which the manuscripts were most multiplied. The "Summa Confessorum" of John of Freiburg (d. 1314) is, according to F. von Schulte, the most perfect product of this class of literature.

The Pisan Bartolommeo of San Concordio has left us a "Summa Casuum" composed in 1338, in which the matter is arranged in alphabetical order. It was very successful in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. The manuals for confessors of John Nieder (d. 1438), St. Antoninus, Archbishop of Florence (d. 1459), and Girolamo Savonarola (d. 1498) were much esteemed in their time[11][12]

Law

In the area of Law, the summa is a practical and didactic genre, that was developed from the methodology of the gloss. It was divided into two different literary genres: the summa (derived from the similia), and the questio legitima (derived from the contraria).

The summa was born in the minor Law schools whose aim was to instruct their students with easy summaries of the Justinian codes. In order to achieve this goal, easy, simple and systematic summaries of whole works were made, and the literary genre of the summae in the legal area was born.

The summae were developed specially in the civil law schools of Occitanie specially regarding Justinian's Institutiones.

Some important legal summae

  • Azo of Bologna's Summa Codicis.
  • Summa Codicis written in Occitan and known as Lo Codi, translated into Latin by Riccardo Pisano.

Theology and Philosophy

The teaching of Theology and Philosophy during the Middle Ages had two different ways: lectio and disputatio:

  • The lectio (lesson) was very similar to a present class. The teacher commented the sentences and doctrines of famous and known authors, such as for instance, Aristotle's or Boethius' works, or Peter Lombard's sentences.
  • The disputatio (dispute) was more informal than the lectio, and was a real dialogue between teachers and disciples, where arguments in favour of or against any theses or subject were defended.

These two school methods originated their literary forms:

  • From the lectio, the commentaria (commentaries) were born. And these ones brought the summae about, which were freer and more autonomous and systematic than the commentaria.
  • The disputatio originated the quaestiones disputatae (disputed matters), that gather the material of the disputes that were held every two weeks; and the quodlibeta (random questions), that gathered the disputes that were held in Christmas and Easter. This methodology of the disputationes was the technical model of the famous mediaeval summae.[13]

Theology

There are more or less sixty extant summae in this field, including:

References

  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Summæ" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
Attribution

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Summæ". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

Notes

  1. ^ Franklin-Brown, Mary (2012). Reading the world : encyclopedic writing in the scholastic age. Chicago London: The University of Chicago Press. p. 61. ISBN 9780226260709.
  2. ^ Mateu Ibars, Josefina. Braquigrafía de sumas: estudio analítico en la traditio de algunos textos manuscritos, incunables e impresos arcaicos, s. XIII-XVI Barcelona: Edicions Universitat Barcelona, 1984 https://books.google.es/books?id=HsPEsH9MMX4C&dq=suma+%22g%C3%A9nero+literario%22&hl=es&source=gbs_navlinks_s (in Spanish)
  3. ^ https://books.google.es/books?id=kyley4JXgNEC&dq=suma+%22g%C3%A9nero+literario%22&hl=es&source=gbs_navlinks_s (in Spanish)
  4. ^ Literary Forms of Medieval Philosophy (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
  5. ^ Mandonnet, Siger de Brabant, I, 53.
  6. ^ Grabmann, "Studien ueber Ulrich von Strassburg" in "Zeitschrift für Kathol. Theol.", XXIX, 1905, 82.
  7. ^ Ilgner, "Die Volkswirtschaftlichen Anschauungen: Antonins von Florenz", Paderborn, 1904.
  8. ^ Mandonnet, "Des écrits authentiques de St. Thomas", Fribourg, 1910, p. 86.
  9. ^ IV, 1880, 191.
  10. ^ "Miscellan. Lib." (Augsburg, 1723, 59.
  11. ^ Quétif-Echard, "Script. Ord. Praed."; I, passim, Hurter, "Nomenclator literarius; aetas media", Innsbruck, 1906, passim; F. von Schulte, "Gesch. der Quellen und Literatur des canonischen Rechts", Stuttgart, II, 1877, p. 410 sqq.; Dietterle, "Die Summæ confessorum von ihren Anfängen an bis zu Silvester Prierias" in "Zeitschrift für Kirchengesch.", XXIV, 1903; XXVIII, 1907).
  12. ^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Order of Preachers" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  13. ^ Merino, J.A. OFM. Historia de la filosofía franciscana. Madrid. BAC. 1993, p. 13. (in Spanish)

summa, other, uses, disambiguation, contents, features, history, dominican, works, some, important, legal, summae, theology, philosophy, theology, references, notes, diminutive, summula, plural, summae, summulae, respectively, medieval, didactics, literary, ge. For other uses see Summa disambiguation Contents 1 Features 2 History 3 Dominican works 4 Law 4 1 Some important legal summae 5 Theology and Philosophy 5 1 Theology 6 References 7 Notes Summa and its diminutive summula plural summae and summulae respectively was a medieval didactics literary genre written in Latin born during the 12th century and popularized in 13th century Europe In its simplest sense they might be considered texts that sum up knowledge in a field such as the compendiums of theology philosophy and canon law Their function during the Middle Ages was largely as manuals or handbooks of necessary knowledge used by individuals who would not advance their studies any further 1 Features EditIt was a kind of encyclopedia that developed a matter about Law Theology or Philosophy most of all Matters were divided in a more detailed way as it was in the tractatus treatise since they were divided into quaestiones questions and these ones were also divided into articles The articles had the following structure Title of the article as a question and showing two different positions disputatio Objections or arguments against one of the alternatives specially the one that defended the author Arguments in favor of such an alternative based on the Bible the Holy Fathers and so on Solution that includes arguments that combine faith and reason and that express the author s thought The sententia or answer to the question that consists in the refutation of the initial objections against the author s solution 2 3 History EditSome historians of theology cite Origen s peri archon as the first summary of Catholic theology Others consider that the first in point of time is De Trinitate by St Hilary of Poitiers The distinction has also been accorded to Radulfus Ardens an eleventh century theologian and preacher a native of Beaulieu author of a comprehensive Speculum Universale still in Manuscript In this wide sense of the word however the encyclopedic treatises of St Isidore of Seville Rabanus Maurus etc entitled De Etymologiis or De Universo might also be considered to be summaries of theology and philosophy In the stricter sense of the word Summa is applied to the more technical systematic compendiums which began to appear in the twelfth century According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy the form was invented by the grammarian Peter Helias 4 An alternative title is Sentences Latin Libri Sententiarum the diminutive Summulae being of later origin What is peculiar to summists or sententiaries as the authors of these works are called is the adoption of the method first suggested by Gerbert in his De Rationali et Ratione Uti and used by Abelard in his Sic et Non consisting in an exposition of contradictory views the affirmative and negative Progress towards the final form of the thirteenth century Summae is marked by the greater care which was taken as time went on to explain in a systematic manner the apparent contradiction among the conflicting opinions presented Besides this method of exposition the twelfth century summists adopted dialectic definitely as a means of elucidating not only philosophical but also theological truth Finally the summists adopted more or less unanimously a fixed division of the field of theology and philosophy and adhered more or less closely to a definite order of topics Here of course there was room for individual preferences in the matter of arrangement and sequence of problems as we see when we compare with one another the Summae even of the latest period of Scholasticism The first great summist was Peter Lombard died 1160 author of the Books of Sentences and surnamed Master of Sentences The order of topics in the Books of Sentences is as follows In the first place the topics are divided into res and signa or things and signs Things are subdivided into the object of our happiness God to this topic Peter devotes the first book means of attaining this object viz creatures the topic treated in the second book virtues men and angels that is special means of happiness and subjects of happiness the topic of the third book the fourth book is devoted to signs the sacraments How far Peter Lombard was influenced by earlier summists such as Robert Pullen Hugh of St Victor and the author of the Summa Sententiarum which was immediately inspired by Abelard s work historians have not determined It is generally admitted that the Lombard was not entirely original He deserves his renown as the first great summist chiefly because in spite of the opposition which his work met during his lifetime its influence grew greater in time until in the thirteenth century it was universally adopted as a text Notwithstanding all that hostile critics of Scholasticism have said about the dryness and unattractiveness of the medieval Summae these works have many merits from the point of view of pedagogy and a philosophical school which supplements as Scholasticism did the compendious treatment of the Summae with the looser form of treatment of the Quaestiones Disputatae and the Opuscula unites in its method of writing the advantages which modern philosophy derives from the combination of textbook and doctor s dissertation The Summa Theologica of St Thomas Aquinas begun when Aquinas was Regent Master at the studium provinciale at Santa Sabina the forerunner of the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas Angelicum is often considered the most perfect specimen of this kind of literature The term Summulae was used for the most part to designate the logical compendiums which came to be adopted as texts in the schools during the thirteenth century The best known of these is the Summulae Logicales of Peter Hispanus afterwards Pope John XXI Dominican works EditManuals of theology and more especially manuals or summae on penance for the use of confessors were composed in great numbers The oldest Dominican commentaries on the Sentences are those of Roland of Cremona Hugh of Saint Cher Richard Fitzacre Robert of Kilwardby and Albertus Magnus The series begins with the year 1230 if not earlier and the last are prior to the middle of the thirteenth century 5 The Summa of St Thomas 1265 75 is still the masterpiece of theology The monumental work of Albertus Magnus is unfinished The Summa de bono of Ulrich of Strasburg d 1277 a disciple of Albert is still unedited but is of interest to the historian of the thought of the thirteenth century 6 The theological summa of St Antoninus is highly esteemed by moralists and economists 7 The Compendium theologicae veritatis of Hugh Ripelin of Strasburg d 1268 is the most widespread and famous manual of the Middle Ages 8 The chief manual of confessors is that of Paul of Hungary composed for the Brothers of St Nicholas of Bologna 1220 21 and edited without mention of the author in the Bibliotheca Casinensis 9 and with false assignment of authorship by Raymund Duellius 10 The Summa de Poenitentia of Raymond of Pennafort composed in 1235 was a classic during the Middle Ages and was one of the works of which the manuscripts were most multiplied The Summa Confessorum of John of Freiburg d 1314 is according to F von Schulte the most perfect product of this class of literature The Pisan Bartolommeo of San Concordio has left us a Summa Casuum composed in 1338 in which the matter is arranged in alphabetical order It was very successful in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries The manuals for confessors of John Nieder d 1438 St Antoninus Archbishop of Florence d 1459 and Girolamo Savonarola d 1498 were much esteemed in their time 11 12 Law EditIn the area of Law the summa is a practical and didactic genre that was developed from the methodology of the gloss It was divided into two different literary genres the summa derived from the similia and the questio legitima derived from the contraria The summa was born in the minor Law schools whose aim was to instruct their students with easy summaries of the Justinian codes In order to achieve this goal easy simple and systematic summaries of whole works were made and the literary genre of the summae in the legal area was born The summae were developed specially in the civil law schools of Occitanie specially regarding Justinian s Institutiones Some important legal summae Edit Azo of Bologna s Summa Codicis Summa Codicis written in Occitan and known as Lo Codi translated into Latin by Riccardo Pisano Theology and Philosophy EditThe teaching of Theology and Philosophy during the Middle Ages had two different ways lectio and disputatio The lectio lesson was very similar to a present class The teacher commented the sentences and doctrines of famous and known authors such as for instance Aristotle s or Boethius works or Peter Lombard s sentences The disputatio dispute was more informal than the lectio and was a real dialogue between teachers and disciples where arguments in favour of or against any theses or subject were defended These two school methods originated their literary forms From the lectio the commentaria commentaries were born And these ones brought the summae about which were freer and more autonomous and systematic than the commentaria The disputatio originated the quaestiones disputatae disputed matters that gather the material of the disputes that were held every two weeks and the quodlibeta random questions that gathered the disputes that were held in Christmas and Easter This methodology of the disputationes was the technical model of the famous mediaeval summae 13 Theology Edit There are more or less sixty extant summae in this field including Simon of Tournai s Summa or Institutiones in sacram paginam 1165 Prepositinus of Cremona s Summa de officiis or Summa de poenitentia Gerard of Sesso incipit Ne transgrediaris c 1200 William of Auxerre s Summa Aurea 1220 Thomas Aquinas Summa Theologiae 1274 Thomas Aquinas Summa contra Gentiles Alexander of Hales Summa Theologiae 13th century Gerard of Bologna s Summa Theologiae 1317 Francesc Eiximenis Summa Theologica fragments 14th centuryReferences EditHerbermann Charles ed 1913 Summae Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Summae Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Notes Edit Franklin Brown Mary 2012 Reading the world encyclopedic writing in the scholastic age Chicago London The University of Chicago Press p 61 ISBN 9780226260709 Mateu Ibars Josefina Braquigrafia de sumas estudio analitico en la traditio de algunos textos manuscritos incunables e impresos arcaicos s XIII XVI Barcelona Edicions Universitat Barcelona 1984 https books google es books id HsPEsH9MMX4C amp dq suma 22g C3 A9nero literario 22 amp hl es amp source gbs navlinks s in Spanish https books google es books id kyley4JXgNEC amp dq suma 22g C3 A9nero literario 22 amp hl es amp source gbs navlinks s in Spanish Literary Forms of Medieval Philosophy Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Mandonnet Siger de Brabant I 53 Grabmann Studien ueber Ulrich von Strassburg in Zeitschrift fur Kathol Theol XXIX 1905 82 Ilgner Die Volkswirtschaftlichen Anschauungen Antonins von Florenz Paderborn 1904 Mandonnet Des ecrits authentiques de St Thomas Fribourg 1910 p 86 IV 1880 191 Miscellan Lib Augsburg 1723 59 Quetif Echard Script Ord Praed I passim Hurter Nomenclator literarius aetas media Innsbruck 1906 passim F von Schulte Gesch der Quellen und Literatur des canonischen Rechts Stuttgart II 1877 p 410 sqq Dietterle Die Summae confessorum von ihren Anfangen an bis zu Silvester Prierias in Zeitschrift fur Kirchengesch XXIV 1903 XXVIII 1907 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Order of Preachers Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Merino J A OFM Historia de la filosofia franciscana Madrid BAC 1993 p 13 in Spanish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Summa amp oldid 1070575794, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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