Gonzalo De Berceo

Gonzalo de Berceo was born in the end of the 12th century in the Riojan village of Berceo, close to the major Benedictine monastery of San Millán de la Cogolla. He died some years before 1264. He is celebrated for his poems on religious subjects, written in a style of verse which has been called Mester de Clereca, shared with more secular productions such as the Libro de Alexandre and the Libro de Apolonio, and later works, such as the fourteenth-century Libro de Buen Amor. He is recorded as being a deacon in his home parish in the early 1220s, and as a priest from 1237 on. It has been surmised that he studied in the nascent university of Palencia, and may have served in the curia of the bishop of Calahorra. He wrote devotional and theological works. The devotional may be divided into two sub-sections: the Marian (the long Milagros de Nuestra Seňora (Miracles of Our Lady - perhaps influenced by Gautier de Coincy), the Duelo de la Virgen (the Mourning of the Virgin, a dialogue between the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint Bernard of Clairvaux) and Loores de la Virgen (the Praises of the Virgin, which is a type of salvation history); and the hagiographical (the Vida de San Milln de la Cogolla, Vida de Santo Domingo de Silos and the Vida de Santa Oria-the lives of Aemilian of la Cogolla, Dominic of Silos, and Oria). These three are saints have a strong regional attachment: Aemilian, a Visigothic saint, was patron of the near-by monastery; Dominic, eleventh-century abbot of Silos and one of the most important saints in thirteenth-century Spain, was born in the town of Caas, near to Berceo; and Oria was an anchoress who lived in the monastery of San Milln during the late eleventh century. He also wrote the fragmentary Martirio de San Lorenzo (the Martyrdom of Saint Lawrence, the Roman martyr of the third century), which may be connected to a shrine of St Lawrence supposedly built by Aemilian himself, at the top of the mountain below which the monastery of San Milln is situated.
   
The theological works are the Del sacrificio de la misa (On the Sacrifice of the Mass), a verse-compendium of the significance of the priest's actions during the eucharist; and Los signos del juicio final (the Signs of the Last Judgement), a description of the prodigies that will be witnessed before the return of Christ to judge the living and the dead. His proximity to San Milln and his composition of hagiographies which seem to support the monastery's interests, have led him to be considered a propagandist for the narrow interests of the monastery of San Milln. This view has been propounded above all by Brian Dutton, editor of Gonzalo de Berceo's collected works, although some critics (notably Fernando Baos and Isabel Uría Maqua) have taken a view which presents the poet as less motivated by his concerns for the monastery; others (particularly Gregory Andrachuk) have linked him to the Lateran reforms.

 

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