This article presents the history of the medieval Latin translations of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics. It features the names of some key figures of the period like Burgundio of Pisa, Robert Grosseteste, and William of Moerbeke. The main focus lies on the question whether Robert Grosseteste had access to a complete copy of the earlier translation by Burgundio of Pisa, or only to the fragmentary version that has come down to us. To reach an answer, the Latin versions and their Greek models are studied as “fluid texts”, which indicates that all individual witnesses of the text and of its translations contain readings and variants that differentiate them from each other and from the translator’s ultimate intentions. In their turn, the fluid el...
A medieval Latin translation of Hippocrates’ Epidemics VI is preserved in twenty-one manuscripts; in...
The Greek text of Alexander of Aphrodisias' De fato is contained, either completely or partially, in...
For the full article, please visit Project MUSE or click here (subscribers only).This article examin...
Among his many accomplishments, Grosseteste is known for translating Greek philosophical, theologica...
This article gathers and brings together, for the first time in a single study, the different aspect...
The paper consists of two parts. In the first part the author confronts the results of modern resear...
Robert Grosseteste’s utilization of Greek and Arabic Aristotelian commentators represents an intrigu...
This article is the second part of a study on an anonymous Latin translation of the Outlines of Pyr...
This study focuses on the first medieval reception of Aristotle’s De caelo by providing an account o...
Robert Grosseteste’s utilization of Greek and Arabic Aristotelian commentators represents an intrigu...
Obra ressenyada: Xavier BARRAL i ALTET, L'art romànic català a debat Josemi Lorenzo Arribas. Barcelo...
This paper explores the similarities between a crucial passage in Robert Grosseteste’s commentary on...
The Latin Version of the Régime du Corps by Aldobrandino of Siena : an Untimely Witness - The manusc...
In this article l discuss the main thorny and points the translator has to tackle when approaching t...
This article considers the ways in which Aristotle’s notion of hamartia (ἁμαρτία) in the Poetics—the...
A medieval Latin translation of Hippocrates’ Epidemics VI is preserved in twenty-one manuscripts; in...
The Greek text of Alexander of Aphrodisias' De fato is contained, either completely or partially, in...
For the full article, please visit Project MUSE or click here (subscribers only).This article examin...
Among his many accomplishments, Grosseteste is known for translating Greek philosophical, theologica...
This article gathers and brings together, for the first time in a single study, the different aspect...
The paper consists of two parts. In the first part the author confronts the results of modern resear...
Robert Grosseteste’s utilization of Greek and Arabic Aristotelian commentators represents an intrigu...
This article is the second part of a study on an anonymous Latin translation of the Outlines of Pyr...
This study focuses on the first medieval reception of Aristotle’s De caelo by providing an account o...
Robert Grosseteste’s utilization of Greek and Arabic Aristotelian commentators represents an intrigu...
Obra ressenyada: Xavier BARRAL i ALTET, L'art romànic català a debat Josemi Lorenzo Arribas. Barcelo...
This paper explores the similarities between a crucial passage in Robert Grosseteste’s commentary on...
The Latin Version of the Régime du Corps by Aldobrandino of Siena : an Untimely Witness - The manusc...
In this article l discuss the main thorny and points the translator has to tackle when approaching t...
This article considers the ways in which Aristotle’s notion of hamartia (ἁμαρτία) in the Poetics—the...
A medieval Latin translation of Hippocrates’ Epidemics VI is preserved in twenty-one manuscripts; in...
The Greek text of Alexander of Aphrodisias' De fato is contained, either completely or partially, in...
For the full article, please visit Project MUSE or click here (subscribers only).This article examin...