Explore a 13th‑century vision of love, morality, and the consequences of desire in a scholarly edition of Le Breviari d'Amor, Vol. 2.
This volume presents a compilation of moral reflections, devotional passages, and debates on love drawn from medieval troubadour culture. It offers careful, annotated insight into how desire, virtue, and spiritual duty are treated in historical texts, with passages that illuminate the era’s views on sin, penance, and the afterlife. Ideal for readers curious about early love literature and its ethical frameworks.
Within these pages you will encounter structured discussions on repentance, the tenets of faith, and the social language of love in medieval vernacular. The selections foreground the relationship between body, spirit, and moral choice, as they present cautions, exhortations, and rhetorical questions that guided readers of the time. The edition preserves the linguistic texture of the source while guiding modern readers through its themes and references.
- Discussion of moral duties, penance, and the imagined punishments for sin.
- Sections that frame love as a spiritual and ethical testing ground.
- Introductory context for troubadour culture and its literary concerns.
- Notes that help readers understand historical terms and references.
Ideal for readers of historical poetry, medieval literature, and early romance traditions who want a window into how love and virtue were imagined in the past.