The Siege of Jerusalem has long confounded readers with its graphic depictions of violence and the relish with which it describes the suffering of Jewish people. Despite the moral and emotional challenges this text presents, its participation in the longstanding “Vengeance of Our Lord” tradition, discussed throughout medieval Christendom and incorporating a combination of legend, miracle, historiography, and chivalric romance, provides modern readers with a wider window into this material’s reception and reuse in medieval England. This Middle English alliterative poem, written anonymously sometime in the fourteenth century, chronicles the Siege of Jerusalem in the year 70 CE, beginning with the crucifixion of Jesus and culminating in the Romans’ destruction of the Second Temple, intended to symbolize the vengeance of Jesus. Michael Livingston’s edition and notes bring out a new dimension of this poem, exploring the ways in which it realizes, rather than glorifies, the brutalities of war.

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The poem chronicles a historical war, and it is this historical quality that must stand out: the poem not only has resonances of the bloodshed that battle inevitably brings, but it also is, in a very literal sense, history. That is to say, the war is over. The vengeance of Jesus has been accomplished.
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Acknowledgments
Introduction
History of the Temple
The Vengeance of Our Lord Tradition
Date and Provenance of the Poem
Overview of the Poem
Initial Critical Issues: Genre, Jews, and Violence
Sources for the Poem
The End of the Fourteenth Century: The Idea of Just War
The Structure of the Poem: Architecture of Divine Providence
The Laud Manuscript and Its Vocabulary
Manuscripts

Siege of Jerusalem

Explanatory Notes
Textual Notes
Bibliography
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781580440905
Publisert
2005-03-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Medieval Institute Publications
Høyde
254 mm
Bredde
178 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
154

Redaktør

Biografisk notat

Michael Livingston is Associate Professor of English at The Citadel, in Charleston, S.C. He is an author of both fiction and non-fiction and has published on topics as diverse as early Christianity, Tolkien, and James Joyce.