4.0878 Queries (3/69)
Elaine Brennan & Allen Renear (EDITORS@BROWNVM.BITNET)
Thu, 10 Jan 91 19:48:06 EST
Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 4, No. 0878. Thursday, 10 Jan 1991.
(1) Date: Mon, 07 Jan 91 11:33:28 CST (15 lines)
From: ENCOPE@LSUVM
Subject: INTERNET LIB
(2) Date: 9 Jan 91 13:54:00 EST (12 lines)
From: "Mary Dee Harris" <mdharris@guvax.georgetown.edu>
Subject: Margaret Cheney's e-mail address
(3) Date: Thu, 10 Jan 91 12:48 CST (42 lines)
From: Bill Kupersmith <BLAWRKWY@UIAMVS>
Subject: Humanist Latin
(1) --------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 07 Jan 91 11:33:28 CST
From: ENCOPE@LSUVM
Subject: INTERNET LIB
This is an issue that's been treated many times on HUMANIST, so please
answer to my private address, ENCOPE@LSUVM. Two questions:
Am I correct that the name for the file listing libraries with online
catalogues is INTERNET LIB?
To which listserv to I address a request to "get" this file?
Thank you.
Kevin L. Cope
(2) --------------------------------------------------------------21----
Date: 9 Jan 91 13:54:00 EST
From: "Mary Dee Harris" <mdharris@guvax.georgetown.edu>
Subject: Margaret Cheney's e-mail address
Margaret Cheney sent me a note and I seem to have lost it before I
could respond. I'd appreciate knowing her address so I can contact her.
Mary Dee Harris
mdharris@guvax.georgetown.edu
mdharris@guvax.bitnet
(3) --------------------------------------------------------------50----
Date: Thu, 10 Jan 91 12:48 CST
From: Bill Kupersmith <BLAWRKWY@UIAMVS>
Subject: Humanist Latin
For no good reason, I happened to glance at Milton's Latin elegies on
the Bishops of Winchester ("Elegia tertia" and of Ely ("Anno aetatis 17:
In obitum Praesulis Eliensis") and suddenly realized that I had never
encountered the word "praesul" before in Latin. Checked Oxford Latin
Dictionary and discovered it meant "A dancer at the head of a religious
procession or sim." citing Cicero, Div. 1. 55. That's all. Lewis and
Short were a little more helpful and I discovered Cicero used the word
four times in Div. (and I assume nowhere else) and that there are
post-classical uses of "praesul" to mean "a presider, president,
director, patron, protector, etc." Fine, but when did "praesul" come to
mean "bishop"?
I know the Renaissance humanists tried to banish post-classical words
from their Latin vocabularies, so that they might have found the word
"episcopus" (the normal church Latin term, borrowed from Greek, and from
which our word "bishop" comes) unacceptable. Did other humanists
besides Milton use "praesul" to mean "bishop"? (The Bush commentary on
the Latin poems of Milton doesn't mention the word.) The only other
neo-Latin poem about a bishop that I know is Crashaw's on Lancelot
Andrewes' picture, and it's entitled "In Picturam Reverendissmi
Episcopi[!] D. Andrews." Was there perhaps an Anglican vs. puritan
distinction between "episcopus" and "praesul"?
Then too, how did humanist writers refer to other ranks of the hierarchy
of the Christian church? "Presbyterus" seems to have "sacerdos" as an
acceptable Classical equivalent, and I assume "Pontifex maximus" is the
Classical alternative for "Papa." But what about other ecclesiastical
titles?
As there seem to be lots of experts on Renaissance humanism on Humanist
(as indeed there should be) I hope someone might know.
--Bill Kupersmith
University of Iowa