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E06582: Aldhelm, in his prose On Virginity, names *Eugenia (virgin and martyr of Rome, S00401) as an exemplary virgin. Written in Latin in southern Britain, for the nuns at the monastery at Barking (south-east Britain), c. 675/686.
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posted on 2018-09-21, 00:00 authored by bsavillAldhelm, prose On Virginity, 44
Quid vero beatam Eugeniam loquar perennis pudicitiae sertis corona tam et floridae virginitatis vexillo armatam? Cum litteris liberalibus imbuta omnes filosoforum sillogismos et Epicuri sectas atque Aristotelis argumenta simulque quinquennem Stoicorum taciturnitatem perfecte iuxta sofismatum disciplinas didicisset, a Philippo patre interpellata et a proco generosis orto natalibus ad nuptias petita ob potiorem virginitatis gloriam ut spurca sterquilinia sprevit [...]
'What shall I say of the blessed EUGENIA, crowned with the garland of perennial chastity and armed with the banner of flourishing virginity? When, being educated in the liberal arts, she had learned perfectly all the syllogisms of the philosophers and the doctrines of Epicurus and the arguments of Aristotle, together with the five-year silence of the Stoics, according to the teachings of these wise men, (even though) urged by her father Phillip, and sought in marriage by a suitor born of a noble family, for the sake of the greater glory of her virginity she spurned (the idea) like foul excrement [...]'
Text: Ehwald 1919, 296. Translation: Lapidge and Herren 1979, 110-111.
Quid vero beatam Eugeniam loquar perennis pudicitiae sertis corona tam et floridae virginitatis vexillo armatam? Cum litteris liberalibus imbuta omnes filosoforum sillogismos et Epicuri sectas atque Aristotelis argumenta simulque quinquennem Stoicorum taciturnitatem perfecte iuxta sofismatum disciplinas didicisset, a Philippo patre interpellata et a proco generosis orto natalibus ad nuptias petita ob potiorem virginitatis gloriam ut spurca sterquilinia sprevit [...]
'What shall I say of the blessed EUGENIA, crowned with the garland of perennial chastity and armed with the banner of flourishing virginity? When, being educated in the liberal arts, she had learned perfectly all the syllogisms of the philosophers and the doctrines of Epicurus and the arguments of Aristotle, together with the five-year silence of the Stoics, according to the teachings of these wise men, (even though) urged by her father Phillip, and sought in marriage by a suitor born of a noble family, for the sake of the greater glory of her virginity she spurned (the idea) like foul excrement [...]'
Text: Ehwald 1919, 296. Translation: Lapidge and Herren 1979, 110-111.