De mortalitate was written by Cyprian on the occasion of a terrible plague that struck the communities of northern Africa in the middle of the third century. The bishop of Carthage uses various means of expression, such as when he describes the symptoms and explains the phenomenology of the disease; he also takes up the clichés of the classic consolatio genre to help readers by making their faith firm. This article aims to examine the writer’s narrative and argumentative techniques by documenting the ways in which certain themes present in the ancient literary tradition emerge and by noting the literary in tent that writing reveals in particular in the representation of the plague and its consequences
The infamous Black Death of 1348 signalled the reappearance of bubonic plague in Europe after centur...
his essay observes, in the light of dramatic paradigms, the use of the symbolic imagery of infection...
The essay presents some links between the concepts of epidemic and melancholy between the mid-fourte...
This paper aims to provide a historical overview of the main epidemic episodes that devastated the a...
The Cyprian Plague, named after Saint Cyprian of Carthage, occurred between 251-270 CE, adding str...
By examining studies about ancient Christianity we realize that some analyzes are still in a guided ...
In the third century AD a pandemic ravished the Roman Empire. Death smothered communities effectivel...
This paper is an attempt to consider what history is, researching into a historicalsignificance of C...
This paper examines the tradition in classical literature of writing about plagues, with particular...
In Classical and Late Antiquity it was uncommon that the reputation of a Latin writer spread in the ...
©2024. The authors. This document is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creati...
St. Cyprian was a pivotal figure in the early Church. During his tenure as bishop of Carthage, 248-9...
An account of the theme of plagues in Greek literature (Sophocles, Thucydides) and Roman literature ...
During the ten years that Cyprian was bishop of Carthage (A.D. 249-258) there were five bishops of R...
This article examines an important theme in Cyprian’s address to the pagan Demetrianus, in which Cyp...
The infamous Black Death of 1348 signalled the reappearance of bubonic plague in Europe after centur...
his essay observes, in the light of dramatic paradigms, the use of the symbolic imagery of infection...
The essay presents some links between the concepts of epidemic and melancholy between the mid-fourte...
This paper aims to provide a historical overview of the main epidemic episodes that devastated the a...
The Cyprian Plague, named after Saint Cyprian of Carthage, occurred between 251-270 CE, adding str...
By examining studies about ancient Christianity we realize that some analyzes are still in a guided ...
In the third century AD a pandemic ravished the Roman Empire. Death smothered communities effectivel...
This paper is an attempt to consider what history is, researching into a historicalsignificance of C...
This paper examines the tradition in classical literature of writing about plagues, with particular...
In Classical and Late Antiquity it was uncommon that the reputation of a Latin writer spread in the ...
©2024. The authors. This document is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creati...
St. Cyprian was a pivotal figure in the early Church. During his tenure as bishop of Carthage, 248-9...
An account of the theme of plagues in Greek literature (Sophocles, Thucydides) and Roman literature ...
During the ten years that Cyprian was bishop of Carthage (A.D. 249-258) there were five bishops of R...
This article examines an important theme in Cyprian’s address to the pagan Demetrianus, in which Cyp...
The infamous Black Death of 1348 signalled the reappearance of bubonic plague in Europe after centur...
his essay observes, in the light of dramatic paradigms, the use of the symbolic imagery of infection...
The essay presents some links between the concepts of epidemic and melancholy between the mid-fourte...