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Publication Date:
October 2011
ISSN:
1868-9027
DOI:
10.1515/byzs.2010.016

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The Metre in the poems of Christopher Mitylenaios

Marc De Groote1

1BRUGGE

Citation Information: Byzantinische Zeitschrift. Volume 103, Issue 2, Pages 571–594, ISSN (Online) 1864-449X, ISSN (Print) 0007-7704, DOI: 10.1515/byzs.2010.016, October 2011

Publication History:
Published Online:
2011-10-07

Abstract

The poetical corpus of 11th-c. Christopher Mitylenaios, such as it is found in manuscript No. Z α XXIX (13th c.) of the Biblioteca della Badia Greca in Grottaferrata, consists of 145 poems and 2856 verses. Of these carmina 123 are written in jambic trimeters, 18 in dactylic hexameters, three in elegiac distichs, and one in an Anacreontic metre. In the first part of the article outer metric is discussed; among other things one learns that the Anacreontic poem 75 forms metrically a case of its own as it consists of eight strophes of four verses each, whereby the even strophes are followed by two so-called koukoullia, that the dactylic hexameters use 28 out of 32 possible schemes, thus contrasting with the Callimachean and Nonnian types, and that in the dodecasyllables the so-called Binnenschluss after the 5th foot is overwhelmingly present while in no less than 16 hexameters the poet uses a caesura after the 3rd foot. In the second part (inner metric) the numerous transgressions of metrical laws are investigated, as well as verse end and accentuation, and prosody; this last item concerns long and short vowels, diphthongs and dichrona, correptio Attica and hiatus. The text ends with a twofold appendix about caesurae.

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