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Cena Cypriani : ウィキペディア英語版
Cena Cypriani

The ''Cena'' or ''Coena Cypriani'' (i.e. "Feast of Cyprian") is an anonymous prose work written in Latin. Tradition ascribes original authorship to the 3rd-century saint Cyprian, bishop of Carthage, but the text was probably written around 400.〔Johannes Quastern (ed.), ''Patrology: Volume II'', RCL, pp. 371-372〕〔Michael von Albrecht, ''A History of Roman Literature: From Livius Andronicus to Boethius'', Leiden: Brill, 1997, p. 1578〕 There is not a full consensus on this date: according to Arthur Lapôtre, it was written under the rule of the Emperor Julian the Apostate (361-363).〔Angelo Di Berardino (ed.), ''Patrology: Volume IV - The Golden Age of Latin Patristic Literature'', RCL, pp. 315-316〕 A wider range is advanced by Martha Bayless, who dates the work as possibly as late as the 8th century.〔Martha Bayless, ''Parody in the Middle Ages: the Latin tradition'', University of Michigan Press, 1997, p. 215〕
The text tells the story of a banquet held at Cana, where a great king (i.e. God) invites many biblical figures to attend a wedding.〔 The interpretations behind the intent of the work have often radically diverged: it has been both to be some to be a didactic work, if unusual, while others have considered it a prime example of biblical parody.〔M. Bayless 1997, pp. 22-24〕 In Bayless' words, it should be read as an "allegory parodying allegoresis and biblical exegesis".〔M. Bayless 1997, p. 10〕
While on linguistic grounds nobody argues anymore that Saint Cyprian is the author, attempts have been made to attribute the work to other authors. One of the first to study carefully the piece was Adolf Harnack, who argued for it having been written by the poet Cyprianus Gallus on the grounds of its using the ''Acta Pauli''. This view is endorsed by H. Brewer, but opposed by Willy Hass, who argues that Cyprianus and the ''Cena'' author made use of different versions of the Bible. Despite this, Hass agrees that on textual evidence the ''Cena'' came from northern Italy.〔 A different attribution has been made by Lapôtre, who claimed the work to be a satire directed toward Julian the Apostate by the poet Bachiarius.〔M. Bayless 1997, pp. 21-23〕
The work was very popular in the Middle Ages to the point it was read during the coronation of the Carolingian Emperor Charles the Bald in 875.〔 Many rettelings of the story were made in the Middle Ages, the earliest and best known of which are in the 9th century by Johannes Hymonides and Rabanus Maurus.〔M. Bayless 1997, pp. 215-216〕
54 manuscripts survive of the work, the oldest from the 9th century.〔 The work was first printed in 1564 in a collection of Cyprian of Carthage's works.〔 Christine Modesto, Studien zur Cena Cypriani und zu deren Rezeption, Gunter Narr Verlag, 1992, p. 11〕 The ''Cena'' has had a recent return to fame due to its role in the novel ''The Name of the Rose'' by Umberto Eco.〔
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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