Tria Sunt


Book Description

The anonymous Tria sunt, with its wealth of illustrative materials, was a widely used and highly ambitious textbook compiled in the late fourteenth century for rhetorical composition at Oxford. Of all the major Latin arts of poetry and prose, it is the only one not previously edited or translated into English.




Essays on Medieval Rhetoric


Book Description

Originally published between 1981 and 2003, the thirteen essays collected here cover topics in medieval rhetoric from its origins in late antiquity through the end of the Middle Ages. Most of the essays are concerned with the teaching of prose composition, especially the art of letter writing known as the ars dictaminis, and many of them focus on specific textbooks that were used for such instruction, in particular those composed in England from the twelfth through the fifteenth centuries. Individual essays are devoted to works by major figures such as Saint Augustine, Peter of Blois, and Geoffrey of Vinsauf; to teaching programmes at important academic centres such as Oxford and Bologna; and to such topics as the relationship between the art of letter writing and the art of poetry, the oral dimension of medieval epistolography, the manuscript traditions of influential textbooks, medieval genre terminology, and the position of medieval rhetoric within a continuous disciplinary history rooted in classical rhetoric.







Artis logicae rudimenta


Book Description




A Text-Book of the History of Doctrines


Book Description

Reprint of the original, first published in 1867.







A Text-book of the History of Doctrines


Book Description

An introduction to the study of systematic theology. Hagenbach has segregated his doctrines into five periods, the first entitled "From the Apostolic Age to the death of origen," the fifth being "The Age of Criticism, or Speculation, and of the antagonism between faith and knowledge, philosophy and Christianity, reason and revelation; and attempts to reconcile these antagonisms."