Bible Historiale

Folio 1 du Ms Ars. 5057: A preacher preaches to old ladies. "Pource que le Deable qui chascun jour destourbe et enordut le coeur des hommes par oyseuse (ie: "paresse") et par mille lacs (i.e. "lacets, cordes") qu'il a tendus..."(Because the devil, who every day troubles and soils men's hearts with sloth and by a thousand traps...)

The Bible Historiale was the predominant medieval translation of the Bible into French. It translates from the Latin Vulgate significant portions from the Bible accompanied by selections from the Historia Scholastica by Peter Comestor (d. c. 1178), a literal-historical commentary that summarizes and interprets episodes from the historical books of the Bible and situates them chronologically with respect to events from pagan history and mythology.

Authorship

The composite work is organized into parts labeled "text", i.e. from the Bible; "gloss", offering interpretations based on the Historia Scholastica, other authoritative commentaries or the translator's own opinion; "incidents", which insert parallel histories from pagan history and mythology; and "histories", passages directly translated from Comestor's work. It was composed between 1291 and 1295 (1294 old system) by priest and canon Guyart des Moulins, who added a prologue in 1297 announcing his recent election as dean of his canonial chapter at the collegial church of Saint Pierre d'Aire-sur-la-Lys. Describing his own role as translating and "ordering" the text, Guyart censored or omitted portions of the Bible that "should not, according to reason, be translated", rearranged materials "so that the laity might find them better ordered" and, on rare occasions, added further commentaries of his own or from other sources to produce the work known as the Bible Historiale.

Copies

The work was copied in many manuscripts, of which more than a hundred survive, most of them richly illuminated, some with more than 300 miniatures.[1] Genesis is typically especially heavily illustrated. In this respect, it is similar to other vernacular medieval redactions of the Bible such as the Bible moralisée, Biblia pauperum and Speculum Humanae Salvationis; it differed from these, however, in containing extended direct translations from the Bible. The French name is usually used in English, at least partly because scholars differ as to whether "Historiale" should be translated as "historical" or "historiated" (illustrated).

Contents vary tremendously among manuscript copies. Guyart des Moulins did not translate the entire Bible; he seems to have only treated the historical books of the Bible, abridged versions of Job and Proverbs and the combined Gospels, based on Peter Comestor's Historia Evangelica. As early as 1317, however, Paris book shops began adding books from other translations—mainly the one known as the Thirteenth-Century Bible or the University of Paris Bible—to expand the French Bible over several stages to conform to the canonical Vulgate.[2] Samuel Berger categorized the manuscripts into four main families according to their contents, although many fifteenth-century copies resist categorization for their inclusion of new glosses, prologues and other additions from a variety of sources; these have been further categorized and described by Clive Sneddon.[3][4][5][6] One manuscript, London, British Library Royal MS 19 D III, includes some apocryphal stories whose translation is also attributed to Guyart.

Some of the most lavish 14th- and early 15th-century manuscripts are luxury copies commissioned by bibliophile magnates or royalty; John, Duke of Berry owned at least eight, with other notable patrons including Mahaut, Countess of Artois, Joan III, Countess of Burgundy, and several kings of France, including Charles V and John II, whose first copy was captured with him at the Battle of Poitiers.[7] King Charles VIII of France, near the end of his life, ordered it to be printed. The text for the print edition was prepared by Jean de Rély and first published by Antoine Vérard in 1496 and subsequently printed in later editions in Paris and Lyon well into the sixteenth century, even alongside a host of competing translations produced by the Protestant Reformation. It was also widely owned, in manuscript and print, in England, Flanders and modern-day Belgium, and today one may find copies in libraries around the world.

Other versions

While the Bible historiale was by far the most popular medieval French translation of the Bible, it was not the first. Verse adaptations of the Bible first appeared in the latter part of the 12th century, with more or less complete prose French Bibles appearing in the mid thirteenth century. These were the "Thirteenth-Century Bible," probably completed between 1230 and 1250 at the University of Paris and the Acre Bible, written between 1250 and 1254 in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem.[8] The Thirteenth-Century Bible survives in four complete or near-complete copies and a significant number of single volumes (of two) and fragments in addition to parts of it being used to supplement the Bible historiale.[9]

References

  1. Sneddon, Clive R. A Critical Edition of the Four Gospels in the Thirteenth-Century Old French Translation of the Bible, Thesis presented for the degree of D. Phil., Oxford University, 1978.
  2. Berger, Samuel. La Bible française au Moyen Âge : étude sur les plus anciennes versions de la Bible écrites en prose de langue d’oil, Genève, Slatkine Reprints (Fac Similé de l’édition originale Paris, 1884), 1967.
  3. Shailor, Barbara A.,The Medieval Book, University of Toronto Press, 1991, ISBN 0-8020-6853-7, ISBN 978-0-8020-6853-8 Google books
  4. Berger, Samuel. La Bible française au Moyen Âge : étude sur les plus anciennes versions de la Bible écrites en prose de langue d’oil, Genève, Slatkine Reprints (Fac Similé de l’édition originale Paris, 1884), 1967.
  5. Sneddon, Clive R. A Critical Edition of the Four Gospels in the Thirteenth-Century Old French Translation of the Bible, Thesis presented for the degree of D. Phil., Oxford University, 1978.
  6. Sneddon, Clive R. "The ‘Bible du XIIIe siècle’, Its Medieval Public in the Light of its Manuscript Tradition", The Bible and Medieval Culture, Mediaevalia Lovaniensia, Series I/Studia VII, eds. W. Lourdaux and D. Verhelst, Leuven: Leuven University Press, 1979, 125-144
  7. De Hamel, Christopher. A History of Illuminated Manuscripts, London: Phaidon Press, 1986.
  8. Sneddon, Clive R. "The ‘Bible du XIIIe siècle’, Its Medieval Public in the Light of its Manuscript Tradition", The Bible and Medieval Culture, (Mediaevalia Lovaniensia, Series I/Studia VII), eds. W. Lourdaux and D. Verhelst, Leuven: Leuven University Press, 1979, 125-144
  9. Sneddon, Clive R. A Critical Edition of the Four Gospels in the Thirteenth-Century Old French Translation of the Bible, Thesis presented for the degree of D. Phil., Oxford University, 1978.

French bibliography

The different types of the Historical Bible is clearly shown here (aqui ms fr 155). Above the red rubric, a translation of the Historia Scholastica by Comestor, and below, in larger script, Genesis.


External links

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