Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Poetry in Byzantine Literature and Society (1081–1204)
- Part I Poetry and Twelfth-Century Literary Culture
- Part II Poetry and the School
- 5 The Didactic Poetry of Niketas of Herakleia and the Use of Verse in Byzantine Teaching Practice
- 6 Teaching Grammar through Poetry: Tzetzes’ Scholia on the Carmina Iliaca in Context
- 7 Of Mice and Cat: The Katomyomachia as Drama, Parody, School Text and Animal Tale
- 8 On the Roses: Reflections on a Neglected Poem by Nicholas Kallikles (Carm. 29 Romano)
- Part III Poetry, Patronage and Power
- Part IV New Texts, New Interpretations
- Index
8 - On the Roses: Reflections on a Neglected Poem by Nicholas Kallikles (Carm. 29 Romano)
from Part II - Poetry and the School
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 October 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Poetry in Byzantine Literature and Society (1081–1204)
- Part I Poetry and Twelfth-Century Literary Culture
- Part II Poetry and the School
- 5 The Didactic Poetry of Niketas of Herakleia and the Use of Verse in Byzantine Teaching Practice
- 6 Teaching Grammar through Poetry: Tzetzes’ Scholia on the Carmina Iliaca in Context
- 7 Of Mice and Cat: The Katomyomachia as Drama, Parody, School Text and Animal Tale
- 8 On the Roses: Reflections on a Neglected Poem by Nicholas Kallikles (Carm. 29 Romano)
- Part III Poetry, Patronage and Power
- Part IV New Texts, New Interpretations
- Index
Summary
Nicholas Kallikles’ poem 29 Εἰς τὰ ῥόδα is a rich and fascinating text which resists its classification as religious epigram and rather inscribes itself in the tradition of spring ekphrasis, of which it constitutes a good twelfth-century example. The relevance given to themes such as learning and rhetorical ability, whose importance is strongly stressed, and the analogies that the text shows with poems related to school contests suggest that it was probably intended to be performed as the opening of a school competition taking place in the theatron. The existence, in mss. Vatican City, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, Pal. gr. 92 and Florence, Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana, conv. soppr. 2, of a schedos on spring attributed to Kallikles and showing some points of contacts with poem 29 supports this hypothesis and suggests that Kallikles, known mainly for his medical teaching, might have engaged for some time also in the teaching of grammar and rhetoric.
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- Poetry in Byzantine Literature and Society (1081-1204)New Texts, New Approaches, pp. 203 - 222Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024