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Peter of Eboli

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Self-portrait, the tonsured poeta himself, in Liber ad honorem Augusti, 1196

Peter of Eboli or Petrus de Ebulo[1] (Eboli in Campania, flourished ca 1196–1220) was a didactic versifier and chronicler, a monk from Eboli who became a court poet to Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Sicily. His flattering verse Liber ad Honorem Augusti, sive de rebus Siculis, probably written in Palermo, was his first work; it was dedicated to Henry VI, King of Sicily by right of his wife Constance, the Norman heiress and mother of the heir who would be "in every way blessed" according to Peter—Frederick II, stupor mundi— whose birth is described in terms reshaped from Virgil's fourth Eclogue, which Christians read as foretelling the coming of Christ. Peter's "Book in Honor of the Augustus, or Events in Sicily" celebrated in glowing terms of the victory of Henry over his opponent, the illegitimate usurper Tancred, who, though a doughty fighter, was of such short stature that Peter ridicules him as Tancredulus ("Little Tancred"). The copy from Palermo is illuminated with palace scenes, processions and battles in tableaux that vye with the text itself, together with the Bayeux tapestry a precious record of eleventh-century scenes.

Peter of Eboli also wrote a didactic poem De Balneis Puteolanis ("The Baths of Pozzuoli" etc.) that is the first widely distributed guidebook to thermal baths, a weapon in the local economic rivalries that arose over healing, medicinal bathing and the medieval tourist industry in southern Italy during the High Middle Ages. A copy is included in the historical miscellany at the Huntington Library, HM 1342.

Peter's Mira Federici gesta ("remarkable deeds of Frederick") is lost.

Note

  1. ^ In medieval dog-latin, more correctly Petrus Eburensis.

References