From the Research Blog: "Ivo of Chartes, De adventu Domini (On the Advent of the Lord)"

Born around 1040, Ivo of Chartres is primarily known to modern scholarship as a canonist, and he is occasionally recognized as a prolific writer of letters, but relatively little regard has been given to his surviving collection of homilies [1]. This scholarly neglect has been most keenly demonstrated by the absence of critical editions of the sermons, despite the call of Roger Reynolds over thirty years ago, with the overall effect of reducing the quality of academic discourse on one of the more prominent liturgists of the period of the Investiture Controversy [2].
The text most commonly cited in scholarly literature, and the one used in my translation of this homily, is that published by Jacques Paul Migne in Patrologia Latina vol. 162, which is in turn based on previous editions by Fronteau and Hittorp. Although I was not able to consult them within the scope of this project, more than seventy manuscripts survive that contain some or all of the homilies included in the Migne edition. The most important would be Chartres, Bibliothèque Municipal 138, which formerly belonged to Chartres Cathedral, but it was heavily damaged in the Allied bombing of the city during the Second World War and is now largely unreadable...
This is an excerpt from "Ivo of Chartes, De adventu Domini (On the Advent of the Lord)," by Dr. Nick Kamas, published on October 16, 2024. Read the full story.
Originally published by medieval.nd.edu on December 02, 2024.
atLatest Research
- Megan McDermott joins ND–IBM Tech Ethics Lab as new Notre Dame directorThe Notre Dame–IBM Technology Ethics Lab, a critical component of the Institute for Ethics and the Common Good (ECG) and the Notre…
- Jenkins Center for Virtue Ethics receives grant to advance love-based ethical frameworkThe University of Notre Dame has received a $10 million grant from the John Templeton Foundation to support a project titled Love and Social Transformation: Empowering Scholars and Social Innovators to Develop the Love Ethic.
- ND-GAIN releases latest Country Index updateThe lastest update to the University of Notre Dame’s Global Adaptation Initiative's (ND-GAIN) Country Index is now live. The ND-GAIN team will release a second Country Index update in late Fall, which includes…
- In sub-Saharan Africa, 1 in 6 cancer medications found to be defectiveSerious quality defects were found in a significant number of cancer medications from sub-Saharan Africa, according to new research from the University of Notre Dame.
- Belfast conference honors legacy of Irish art historian S.B. KennedyMore than 80 people gathered at the Ulster Museum and Queen’s University Belfast on May 22-23 for the conference “New Histories of Irish Art and Modernism.”
- From giving a TEDx Talk to starting a sustainability initiative, one student’s transformational experience in Hong KongWhen Bernice Antoine decided to do a semester abroad in Hong…