Benedict of Bari

Benedict of Bari (c. 1150 – 1220?), Italian Benedetto da Bari, Latin Benedictus Barensis, was a Benedictine monk of Santissima Trinità della Cava dei Tirreni who wrote the Christian theological treatise De septem sigillis (On the Seven Seals).[1]

Benedict (old and young in one) presenting his book to Abbot Balsamo.

Benedict was a native of Bari. He identifies himself as Barensis dictus, "called the Bariot". He was probably born early in the second half of the 12th century.[2] He wrote De septem sigillis between 1208 and 1232.[1] According to a later note discovered by Jean Mabillon, it was completed around 1227. A 19th-century abbot, however, reported an entry for Benedict in the abbey's necrology for 1220.[3]

De septem sigillis survives in a single illustrated manuscript in Beneventan script kept at La Cava (Cavensis 18). It may be Benedict's autograph. It contains a miniature, perhaps also by Benedict himself, depicting the author handing a copy of his work to his abbot, who is depicted mitred and seated on a chair. The author is depicted advanced in age with a younger man's head imposed above him. This single double-headed figure is probably intended to represent the author when he began and when he finished. De septem sigillis is the product of a lifetime.[1] The caption identifies the abbot as Balsamo.[3]

De septem sigillis is divided into six books[1] subdivided into 361 chapters.[3] The six books are:[1]

  • De incarnatione Verbi (On the Incarnation of the Word)
  • De circumcisione et baptismo (On Circumcision and Baptism)
  • De passione et morte (On Suffering and Death)
  • De resurrectione Christi (On the Resurrection of Christ)
  • De ascensione et adventu Spiritus (On the Ascension and the Advent of the Spirit)
  • De misterio resurrectionis et forma iudicii (On the Mystery of the Resurrection and Judicial Forms)

Benedict is not systematic in his approach. His work covers the Bible, theology, morality and asceticism. His writing is elegant, his Latinity good and he incorporates several songs. He may have been influenced by Joachim of Fiore. His handling of the Book of Revelation is notable for its clarity.[1]

Editions

  • Giuseppe Micunco (ed.), I setti sigilli, Per la Storia della Chiesa di Bari-Bitonto, Vol. 32 (Edipuglia, 2018).
gollark: Sure, I guess.
gollark: No, but it's nice to be able to refer to "Protagonism Street" and have there be no ambiguity.
gollark: ./warp choruscity
gollark: Which we probably do have right now, actually. There are something like... three cities. Cherryville is tiny, Chorus City uses weird names picked by me, and Switch City, well, has roads.
gollark: But I mean globally unique street names in Switchcraft.

References

  1. Rosario Jurlaro, "Benedetto da Bari", Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Vol. 8 (Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana, 1966).
  2. Jurarlo 1966 writes that he was "nato probabilmente a Bari nella seconda metà del sec. XII" and places "sua nascita intorno alla metà dei sec. XII".
  3. J. B. Silvestre with J. J. Champollion-Figeac and A. Champollion, trans. by F. Madden, Universal Bibliography, or Fac-similes of Writings of All Nations and Periods, Vol. 2 (London: H. G. Bohn, 1850), pp. 405–407.
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