The list of Prudentius's works given in the preface to his autobiography mentions the hymns, poems against the Priscillianists and against Symmachus and Peristephanon. The Diptychon is not mentioned. The twelve hymns of the Cathemerinon liber ("Daily Round") consist of six for daily use, five for festivals, and one intended for every hour of the day. The specific works include: •
Liber Cathemerinon -- ("Book in Accordance with the Hours") comprises 12 lyric poems on various times of the day and on church festivals. •
Liber Peristephanon -- ("Crowns of Martyrdom") contains 14 lyric poems on Spanish and Roman martyrs. Some were suggested to Prudentius by sacred images in churches or by the inscriptions of
Pope Damasus I. •
Apotheosis -- ("Deification") attacks disclaimers of the
Trinity and the
divinity of
Jesus. •
Hamartigenia -- ("The Origin of Sin") attacks the
Gnostic dualism of
Marcion and his followers. In this and the
Apotheosis, Tertullian is the source of inspiration. •
Psychomachia -- ("Battle of Souls") describes the struggle of
faith, supported by the
cardinal virtues, against
idolatry and the corresponding
vices. •
Libri contra Symmachum -- ("Books Against
Symmachus") oppose the
pagan senator Symmachus's requests that the altar of
Victory, which had been removed by
Gratian, be restored to the Senate house. •
Dittochæon -- ("The Double Testament") contains 49
quatrains intended as
captions for the
murals of a
basilica in Rome.
Editions • Bergman, J. (ed.).
Aurelii Prudenti Clementis carmina. Vienna: Hölder-Pichler-Tempsky, 1926. (Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum, 61). • Cunningham, M.P. (ed.).
Aurelii Prudentii Clementis Carmina. Turnhout: Brepols, 1966 (Corpus Christianorum. Series Latina, 126). • Thomson, H.J. (ed. and trans.).
Prudentius. 2 vols. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1949-53 (Loeb Classical Library). • Tränkle, H. (ed.). Prudentius,
Contra Symmachum - Gegen Symmachus. Turnhout: Brepols, 2008. 284 p. (Fontes Christiani, 85). ==See also==