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Quinti Septimi Florentis Tertulliani De Anima

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The Supplements to Vigiliae Christianae series was launched in 1987 with the publication of Tertullianus, De Idololatria, a critical text with translation and commentary by J.H. Waszink and J.C.M. ...
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  • 14 December 2009
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The Supplements to Vigiliae Christianae series was launched in 1987 with the publication of Tertullianus, De Idololatria, a critical text with translation and commentary by J.H. Waszink and J.C.M. van Winden (partly based on a manuscript left behind by P.G. van der Nat). It seems appropriate, therefore, that the 100th volume to appear in the Supplements to Vigiliae Christianae series should be an updated reprint of J.H. Waszink’s monumental and authoritative edition of Tertullian’s De Anima. This volume contains the complete contents of the first edition, to which we have added a brief overview of J.H. Waszink’s scholarly career, an English translation of the greater part of the introduction to his German translation of De Anima of 1980 and a list of corrections authorized by him.
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Price: $328.00
Pages: 714
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Vigiliae Christianae, Supplements
Publication Date: 14 December 2009
ISBN: 9789004169043
Format: Hardcover
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"Les Éditions Brill ont pris l’heureuse initiative de réimprimer l’édition commentée de 1947, en la faisant précéder d’une traduction anglaise de l’introduction jointe à la traduction allemande de 1980. [...] Le De anima est un traité insolite, que le commentaire de J. H. W. aide à lire avec profit." – J.-M. Auwers, in: RHE, 2012
J.H. Waszink (1908-1990) studied Classics at Leiden University and completed his studies in 1933 with his dissertation Tertullian, De Anima mit Einleitung, Übersetzung und Kommentar. He started his professional career as a grammar school teacher but, in 1946, he was appointed Professor of Latin at Leiden University. He lectured and published on a wide range of authors, from Ennius to Boethius, but two names stand out in his scholarly work. After Tertullian, the edition of Calcidius’ translation (with a philosophical commentary) of the first half of Plato’s Timaeus became the second great enterprise of his life.
When the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences decided to produce a scholarly edition of Erasmus’ Opera Omnia, Waszink participated actively in the project, both as a member of the editorial board and as an editor of some of Erasmus’ works, including Lingua, which was published a year before Waszink’s death on 5 October 1990.