Sex aetates mundi (Irish)
The Sex aetates mundi is an 11th-century short chronicle in Middle Irish which gives an overview of Old Testament history organized under the schema of the six ages of the world in alternating prose and verse.[1] It is found in several manuscripts, including the Lebor na hUidre.
It draws in part on the 9th-century Latin Historia Brittonum, incorporating a version of the 6th-century "Frankish" Table of Nations that itself is derived from the 1st-century Germania of Tacitus.[2]
Editions
- Dáibhí Ó Cróinín (ed.), The Irish Sex Aetates Mundi, 1983.
gollark: That isn't shortly.
gollark: I thought it might be due to potatOS using a TLCO, but ChorOS uses the same thing for that (Polychoron).
gollark: Weird.
gollark: <@270035320894914560> Hey, you haven't told me what you were going to not LOOSE!
gollark: Er, features.
References
- Bart Jaski, "Sex Aetates Mundi", in Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle, 2010, p. 1353.
- Patrick Wadden (2012), Theories of National Identity in Early Medieval Ireland (PhD dissertation), University of Oxford, pp. 209–232.
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