Classica Americana. An Addendum to the Censuses of Pre-1800 Latin Texts from British North America

Classica Americana. An Addendum to the Censuses of Pre-1800 Latin Texts from British North America This article updates the censuses of North American Neo‑Latin prose and poetry undertaken by the late Leo M. Kaiser, to which it adds over one hundred and fifty items, preserved largely in manuscript c...

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Main Author: Stuart M. McManus
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Seminarium Philologiae Humanisticae 2018-09-01
Series:Humanistica Lovaniensia
Online Access:http://humanistica.be/index.php/humanistica/article/view/279
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spelling doaj-0d98cb8ff68245b1888e0d270668a2fb2020-11-24T21:47:50ZdeuSeminarium Philologiae HumanisticaeHumanistica Lovaniensia0774-29082593-30192018-09-0167242746710.30986/2018.427279Classica Americana. An Addendum to the Censuses of Pre-1800 Latin Texts from British North AmericaStuart M. McManus0Chinese University of Hong KongClassica Americana. An Addendum to the Censuses of Pre-1800 Latin Texts from British North America This article updates the censuses of North American Neo‑Latin prose and poetry undertaken by the late Leo M. Kaiser, to which it adds over one hundred and fifty items, preserved largely in manuscript collections in New England. The genres run the gamut of early modern Latin, from academic oratory to occasional verse, while the addendum also includes works by a number of notable figures in early American history, including Increase Mather (1639‑1723), James Logan (1674‑1751), William Shirley (1694‑1771), John Witherspoon (1722‑1794), John Phillips (1770‑1823) and Aaron Burr Sr. (1716‑1757). The census is prefaced by an introduction that places the works in their broader intellectual context and briefly discusses the life and learning of British America’s last humanist in the Renaissance mold, Ezra Stiles (1727‑1795), whose Latinity makes up a significant proportion of the addendum.http://humanistica.be/index.php/humanistica/article/view/279
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stuart M. McManus
spellingShingle Stuart M. McManus
Classica Americana. An Addendum to the Censuses of Pre-1800 Latin Texts from British North America
Humanistica Lovaniensia
author_facet Stuart M. McManus
author_sort Stuart M. McManus
title Classica Americana. An Addendum to the Censuses of Pre-1800 Latin Texts from British North America
title_short Classica Americana. An Addendum to the Censuses of Pre-1800 Latin Texts from British North America
title_full Classica Americana. An Addendum to the Censuses of Pre-1800 Latin Texts from British North America
title_fullStr Classica Americana. An Addendum to the Censuses of Pre-1800 Latin Texts from British North America
title_full_unstemmed Classica Americana. An Addendum to the Censuses of Pre-1800 Latin Texts from British North America
title_sort classica americana. an addendum to the censuses of pre-1800 latin texts from british north america
publisher Seminarium Philologiae Humanisticae
series Humanistica Lovaniensia
issn 0774-2908
2593-3019
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Classica Americana. An Addendum to the Censuses of Pre-1800 Latin Texts from British North America This article updates the censuses of North American Neo‑Latin prose and poetry undertaken by the late Leo M. Kaiser, to which it adds over one hundred and fifty items, preserved largely in manuscript collections in New England. The genres run the gamut of early modern Latin, from academic oratory to occasional verse, while the addendum also includes works by a number of notable figures in early American history, including Increase Mather (1639‑1723), James Logan (1674‑1751), William Shirley (1694‑1771), John Witherspoon (1722‑1794), John Phillips (1770‑1823) and Aaron Burr Sr. (1716‑1757). The census is prefaced by an introduction that places the works in their broader intellectual context and briefly discusses the life and learning of British America’s last humanist in the Renaissance mold, Ezra Stiles (1727‑1795), whose Latinity makes up a significant proportion of the addendum.
url http://humanistica.be/index.php/humanistica/article/view/279
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