A Short Chronicle of Vandal Kings of Africa: Translation and Overview
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The following work that is the subject of this post was edited by the German classicist Theodor Mommsen in 1898 under his Chronica Minora (“Minor Chronicles”). The work amounts to a short chronicle of the kings of the Vandals from the time they entered Carthage in 439 CE and established their realm in the Africa region centred on Carthage (modern-day Tunisia), until the demise of their kingdom in 533/534 CE at the hands of the Byzantines, who incorporated the territory into their empire and held it until the time of the Islamic conquests. Mommsen’s attempt to reconstruct and edit this chronicle is primarily based on two recensions out of a total of five manuscripts. One of those two recensions is named as the “Augiensis,” while the other is a recension from a Madrid manuscript he put under the title of “Hispani,” where the parts of the text Mommsen extracted for his addition are interlaced with lines from the chronicle of Prosper of Aquitaine, which represented a continuation of Saint Jerome’s Universal Chronicle.
A Short Chronicle of Vandal Kings of Africa: Translation and Overview
A Short Chronicle of Vandal Kings of Africa…
A Short Chronicle of Vandal Kings of Africa: Translation and Overview
The following work that is the subject of this post was edited by the German classicist Theodor Mommsen in 1898 under his Chronica Minora (“Minor Chronicles”). The work amounts to a short chronicle of the kings of the Vandals from the time they entered Carthage in 439 CE and established their realm in the Africa region centred on Carthage (modern-day Tunisia), until the demise of their kingdom in 533/534 CE at the hands of the Byzantines, who incorporated the territory into their empire and held it until the time of the Islamic conquests. Mommsen’s attempt to reconstruct and edit this chronicle is primarily based on two recensions out of a total of five manuscripts. One of those two recensions is named as the “Augiensis,” while the other is a recension from a Madrid manuscript he put under the title of “Hispani,” where the parts of the text Mommsen extracted for his addition are interlaced with lines from the chronicle of Prosper of Aquitaine, which represented a continuation of Saint Jerome’s Universal Chronicle.