Bede and Cicero

The evidence, of Bede's biblical commentaries in particular, suggests 1) that his attitude toward Roman rhetoric, like that of Augustine and Cicero, was ambivalent, 2) that his knowledge reached into the theory of invention, and 3) that he had acces to Cicero's De inventione.

Détails bibliographiques
Auteur:Roger D. Ray
Publié: S.n., s.l., 1987
Volume:16
Pages:1-16
Périodique:Anglo-Saxon England
Format:Article
Sujet:- Biographie > Relations et Sources > Platonisme. Néo-platonisme > Platonisme de Varron, Cicéron et Virgile > Cicéron
- Influence et Survie > Le Moyen Âge (430-1453) > Influence sur les divers auteurs et écrits > Bède le Vénérable (672 [ou 673]-735)
Statut:Needs Review
Description
Résumé:The evidence, of Bede's biblical commentaries in particular, suggests 1) that his attitude toward Roman rhetoric, like that of Augustine and Cicero, was ambivalent, 2) that his knowledge reached into the theory of invention, and 3) that he had acces to Cicero's De inventione.