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purple motes

Artifacts to help you imagine more.

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Highlights

  • Abelard castrated
  • Byzantine wife saves husband
  • Amphitryon & Geta duped
  • Chastelaine de Vergi tragedy
  • Aristotle’s advice to Alexander
  • Empress Theodora: woman leader
  • Tristan & Isuet
  • Xanthippe & Socrates
  • New Modern Sexism Scale

Peter of Blois

Peter of Blois, known in Latin as Petrus Blesensis, was born in Blois in central France about 1130. He died in 1211 or 1212. He studied at the leading universities in Tours, Paris, and Bologna. He then served as tutor to William II in the Sicilian court from 1167 to 1169. He subsequently was associated with the English court of Henry II. He became chancellor to the Archbishop Baldwin of Canterbury, archdeacon of Bath, and served various other high royal and ecclesiastic officials. Peter of Blois was a stylish, learned writer who produced an influential collection of letters. Which surviving 12th-century Latin poems such as the Arundel Lyrics are properly ascribed to him is a matter of scholarly controversy.

men suffering lovesickness: viaticum in medieval Latin poetry

The Arundel Lyrics, exquisite erotic poetry written in Latin in twelfth-century England, thoroughly explore the viaticum’s polarities of lovesickness … Read the post men suffering lovesickness: viaticum in medieval Latin poetry

soldiering for love generated totalizing myth of gender equality

Medieval thinkers’ struggle to reconcile men soldiering for love with gender equality generated word separate from flesh and totalizing myth. … Read the post soldiering for love generated totalizing myth of gender equality

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