Moses of Bergamo

Moses of Bergamo[1] was a twelfth-century Italian poet and translator. He spent time in Constantinople, where he was one of the first Western Europeans to be interested in collecting Greek language manuscripts.[2]

He is known for his Liber Pergamensis, a description of Bergamo in Latin verse. It is the earliest surviving example of a genre: the patriotic description of a medieval commune.

Notes

  1. Moïse de Bergame, Mosè de Brolo, Moses de Brolo, Moyses Pergamensis.
  2. ,
gollark: Free healthcare would just encourage people to get too much healthcare, so they would be too healthy.
gollark: So all children would be raised centrally by the government.
gollark: Children should not have different life outcomes based on their parentage.
gollark: For example, children being sold into slavery by their parents is obviously really bad.
gollark: I would make a much better supreme eternal world dictator for life.

References

  • Charles Homer Haskins (1924), Studies in the History of Mediaeval Science, Chapter X



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