The term
prosimetrum is first attested in the
Rationes dictandi of Hugh of Bologna, in the early 12th century. Sources differ on the date, one suggesting around 1119, Hugh divided metrical composition into three kinds:
quantitative verse (
carmina), verse based on syllable count and assonance (
rithmi), and "the mixed form ... when a part is expressed in verse and a part in prose" (
prosimetrum). The derived adjective
prosimetrical occurs in English as early as Thomas Blount’s
Glossographia (1656) where it is defined as "consisting partly of Prose, partly of Meteer or Verse". Works such as historical chronicles and annals, which quote poetry previously composed by other authors, are not generally regarded as "true"
prosimetra. In the Old Norse-Icelandic tradition, however, vernacular histories and family sagas that quote verses by other authors are commonly accepted as
prosimetra. Researchers of Old Norse
Íslendingasögur have recently made more extensive attempts at cataloging and systematically understanding the prosimetric aspects in that literary corpus. Quoted or "inset" verses are a familiar feature of longer historical texts in the Old Irish and Middle Irish traditions as well. The role of such verse quotations within the prose narrative varies; they may be mined as historical source-material, cited as factual corroboration of an event or recited by a character as dialogue. ==Examples==