Online Encyclopedia

GAIUS VETTIUS AQUILINUS JUVENCUS

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 613 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GAIUS VETTIUS AQUILINUS JUVENCUS  , Christian poet, flourished during the reign of
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Constantine the
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Great . Nothingis known of him except that he was a
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Spanish presbyter of distinguished
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family . About 330 he published his Libri evangeliorum IV., each
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book containing about 800 hexameters . The division into books is possibly a reminiscence of the number of the Gospels . The
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work itself, written with the idea of ousting the absurdities of Pagan
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mythology and replacing them by the truths of
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Christianity, may be called the first Christian epic . In the Praefatio the author expresses the hope that the sacredness of his subject may procure him safety at the final conflagration of the
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world and
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admission into heaven . The whole is, in the main, a poetical version of the Gospel of Matthew, the other evangelists only being used for supplementary details . It is founded upon a pre-vulgate Latin •
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translation, although there is evidence that juvencus also consulted the Greek . In spite of metrical irregularities, the language and style are
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simple and show good taste, being
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free from the artificiality of other Christian poets and
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prose writers, and the author has made excellent use of Virgil (his chief model) and other classical writers . Juvencus set the fashion of verse
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translations of the Bible, and the large number of
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MSS. of his poem mentioned in lists and still extant are sufficient evidence of its great popularity . According to Jerome, he was also the author of some poems on the sacraments, but no trace of these has survived . The Latin Heptateuch, a
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hexameter version of the first seven books of the Old Testament, has been attributed to Juvencus amongst others; but it is now generally supposed to be the work of a certain Cyprianus, a Gaul who lived in the 6th century, possibly a bishop of
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Toulon, author of the
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Life of Caesarius, bishop of Arelate (Arles) .

See M . Manitius, Geschichte der christlich-lateinischen Poesie (1891) ; A .

Ebert, Allgemeine Geschichte der Literatur
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des Mittelalters, vol. i . (1889);
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editions of Juvencus by C . Marold (1886); J . I-Iumer in Corpus scriptorum ecclesiasticorum latinorum, vol.
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xxiv . (Vienna, 1891) ; J . T .
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Hatfield, A Study of Juvencus (189o), dealing with syntax, metre and language; editions of the Heptateuch by J . E . B . Mayor (1889; reviewed by W .

Sanday in Classical

Review,
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October 1889, and by J . T . Hatfield in
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American Journal of
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Philology, vol. xi., 189o), and R . Peiper, vol.
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xxiii. of the Vienna series above .

End of Article: GAIUS VETTIUS AQUILINUS JUVENCUS
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