This collection of 62 fables is more accurately called the verse
Romulus, or elegiac
Romulus (from its
elegiac couplets). Given the uncertainty over the authorship, these terms are used in scholarly works. There is an earlier prose version of
Romulus, also; it has been dated as early as the tenth century, or the sixth century. It is adapted from
Phaedrus; the initial fable "The Cock and the Jewel", supposedly the reply of Phaedrus to his critics, The verse
Romulus formed the mainstream versions of medieval 'Aesop'. It is thought to be the version used by
Dante. It with
Ovid influenced the
Doligamus of . When
John Lydgate produced
Isopes Fabules, the first fable collection written in English, the verse
Romulus was a major source. Particularly sophisticated use of this fable tradition is made later in the 15th century in
Robert Henryson's
Morall Fabillis, written in Scots. Early printed editions appeared under the title
Aesopus moralisatus, around 1500. ==References==