Classical and Medieval European Literature
Classical and medieval European literature spans Greek and Latin antiquity and the literatures of the Middle Ages that transmitted and transformed the classical inheritance.
Definition
The literatures of Greco-Roman antiquity and the European Middle Ages, studied as the foundational layer and transmission of the Western literary tradition.
Scope
This topic covers the literature of ancient Greece and Rome—epic, tragedy, comedy, lyric, history, and rhetoric—and the Latin and emerging vernacular literatures of medieval Europe. It treats the classical genres and authors, their transmission through late antiquity and the Middle Ages, medieval epic, romance, and allegory, and the classical tradition's enduring shaping of later European writing.
Core questions
- What are the major genres and works of Greek and Latin literature?
- How was classical literature transmitted through the Middle Ages?
- How did medieval Latin and vernacular literatures develop?
- How does the classical tradition shape later European writing?
Key concepts
- epic
- tragedy
- topos and rhetoric
- medieval romance
- the classical tradition
Key theories
- Continuity of the Latin tradition
- Curtius argued that recurring topoi and rhetorical conventions inherited from classical and medieval Latin culture provide the underlying continuity of European literature.
- The classical tradition
- Gilbert Highet traced the pervasive influence of Greek and Roman literature on Western writing from the Middle Ages to the modern period.
History
Greek literature began with Homeric epic and developed tragedy, comedy, lyric, and history in the classical period; Roman literature adapted and rivaled it, as in Virgil's Aeneid. Through late antiquity and the medieval Latin schools, this inheritance was transmitted and reworked, giving rise to medieval epic, romance, and allegory and ultimately to the vernacular literatures of Europe.
Debates
- Continuity versus rupture
- Scholars debate whether medieval literature represents a continuous development of classical culture or a series of ruptures and reinventions, as Curtius and Highet variously stress.
Key figures
- Homer
- Virgil
- Dante Alighieri
- Ernst Robert Curtius
- Gilbert Highet
Related topics
Seminal works
- homeriliad
- virgilaeneid
- curtius1953
Frequently asked questions
- Why study classical and medieval literature together?
- The medieval period transmitted, preserved, and transformed classical literature, so the two are deeply continuous and are often studied as a single foundational tradition.
- What languages does this include?
- Primarily ancient Greek and Latin, along with medieval Latin and the early vernacular languages in which medieval European literature was also written.