De Miseria Condicionis Humane

De Miseria Condicionis Humane (On the wretchedness of the human condition), also known as Liber de contemptu mundi, sive De miseria humanae conditionis is a twelfth-century religious text written in Latin by cardinal Lotario dei Segni, later Pope Innocent III.

The text is divided into three parts; in the first part the wretchedness of the human body and the various hardships one has to bear throughout life are described; the second lists man's futile ambitions, i.e. affluence, pleasure and esteem, and the third deals with the decay of the human corpse, the anguish of the damned in hell and the Day of Judgment.

Dei Segni, still a cardinal, began writing De Miseria Condicionis Humane somewhere between late December 1194 and early April 1195.[1]

According to Robert E. Lewis, the editor of the most recent translation in English, approximately 672 manuscripts of the text are extand.[2]

The text in the 1978 Lewis edition is an unemended transcription of a manuscript from the British Library (British Library, Lansdowne 358, ff. 78-109v), originally kept at the Benedictine Abbey of St. Martin in Battle, East Sussex.[3]

De Miseria Condicionis Humane is mentioned in Thomas Mann's novel The Magic Mountain (first published in 1924) when the Jesuit intellectual Leo Naphta and Hans Castorp contemplate on Gothic pessimistic asceticism. Naphta describes De Miseria Condicionis Humane as 'a very witty literary work'.[4] He loans a 'crumbling paperback edition' (most likely the 1855 Achterfeldt edition) to Hans Castorp from his personal library.[5]

Modern editions

External links

References

  1. Lotario dei Segni (Pope Innocent III), De Miseria Condicionis Humane, Robert E. Lewis ed. (Athens, Georgia 1978), 65n.
  2. Lotario dei Segni (Pope Innocent III), De Miseria Condicionis Humane, Robert E. Lewis ed. (Athens, Georgia 1978), 3.
  3. Lotario dei Segni (Pope Innocent III), De Miseria Condicionis Humane, Robert E. Lewis ed. (Athens, Georgia 1978), 55.
  4. Thomas Mann, The Magic Mountain, translated by John E. Woods (London and New York 2005), 466-467.
  5. Thomas Mann, The Magic Mountain, translated by John E. Woods (London and New York 2005), 480.
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