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GESTA ROMANORUM

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Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 910 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GESTA ROMANORUM  , a Latin collection of anecdotes and tales, probably compiled about the end of the 13th

century or the beginning of the 14th . It still possesses a twofold
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literary
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interest, first as one of the most popular books of the time, and secondly as the source, directly or indirectly, of later literature, in Chaucer, Gower, Shakespeare and others . Of its authorship nothing certain is known; and there is little but gratuitous conjecture to associate it either with the name of Helinandus or with that of Petrus Berchorius (
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Pierre Bercheure) . It is even a
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matter of debate whether it took its rise in England, Germany or France . The
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work was evidently intended as a
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manual for preachers, and was probably written by one who himself be-longed to the clerical profession . The name, Deeds of the Romans, is only partially appropriate to the collection in its
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present form, since, besides the titles from Greek and Latin
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history and legend, it comprises fragments of very various origin,
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oriental and
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European . The unifying element of the
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book is its moral purpose . The style is barbarous, and the narrative ability of the compiler seems to vary with his source; but he has managed to bring together a considerable variety of excellent material . He gives us, for example, the germ of the
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romance of " Guy of Warwick "; the story of " Darius and his Three Sons," versified by Occleve;
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part of Chaucer's " Man of Lawes' Tale "; a tale of the emperor
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Theodosius, the same in its main features as that of Shakespeare's Lear; the story of the " Three Black Crows "; the "
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Hermit and the
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Angel," well known from Parnell's version, and a story identical with the Fridolin of Schiller . Owing to the loose structure of the book, it was easy for a transcriber to insert any additional story into his own copy, and consequently the
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MSS. of the Gesta Romanorum exhibit considerable variety . Oesterley recognizes an
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English
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group of MSS . (written always in Latin), a German group (sometimes in Latin and sometimes in German), and a group which is represented by the vulgate or
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common printed text .

The earliest

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editions are supposed to be those of Ketelaer and de Lecompt at Utrecht, of Arnold Ter Hoenen at Cologne, and of
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Ulrich Zell at Cologne; but the exact date is in all three cases uncertain . An English
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translation, probably based directly on the MS . Harl . 5369, was published by Wynkyn de Worde about 1510-1515, the only copy of which now known to exist is preserved in the library of St John's College, Cambridge . In 1577 Richard
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Robin-son published a revised edition of Wynkyn de Worde, and the book proved highly popular . Between 1648 and 1703 at least eight impressions were issued . In 1703 appeared the first vol. of a translation by B . P., probably Bartholomew Pratt, " from the Latin edition.of 1514." A translation by the Rev . C . Swan, first published in 2 vols. in 1824, forms part of Bohn's antiquarian library, and was re-edited by Wynnard Hooper in 1877 (see also the latter's edition in 1894) . The German translation was first printed at Augsburg, 1489 . A French version, under the title of Le Violier
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des histoires romaines moralisez, appeared in the early part of the 16th century, and went through a number of editions; it has been re-printed by G .

Brunet (Paris, 1858) . Critical editions of the Latin text have been produced by A . Keller (
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Stuttgart, 1842) and Oesterley (Berlin, 1872) . See also Warton, " On the Gesta Romanorum," dissertation iii., prefixed to the History of English
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Poetry; Douce, Illustrations of Shakespeare, vol. ii.; Frederick Madden, Introduction to the Roxburghe Club edition of The Old English Versions of the Gesta Romanorum (1838) .

End of Article: GESTA ROMANORUM
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