Mirrors for princes explained

Mirrors for princes or mirrors of princes (Latin: specula principum) was a literary genre of didactic political writings throughout the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. It was part of the broader speculum or mirror literature genre.

The Latin term speculum regum appears as early as the 12th century and may have been used even earlier. It may have developed from the popular speculum literature popular from the 12th to 16th century, focusing on knowledge of a particular subject matter.

These texts most frequently take the form of textbooks for the instruction of kings, princes, or lesser rulers on successful governance and behaviour. The term is also used for histories or literary works presenting model images of good and bad kings. Authors often composed such "mirrors" at the accession of a new king, when a young and inexperienced ruler was about to come to power. One could view them as a species of prototypical self-help book or study of leadership before the concept of a "leader" became more generalised than the concept of a monarchical head-of-state.[1]

One of the earliest works was written by Sedulius Scottus (840–860), the Irish poet associated with the Pangur Bán gloss poem (9th century). Possibly the best known European "mirror" is The Prince (1513) by Niccolò Machiavelli, although this was not the most typical example.

Antiquity

Sumer

Egypt

See also: Sebayt.

Indian

Greek and Roman

Western European texts

Early Middle Ages

Carolingian texts. Notable examples of Carolingian textbooks for kings, counts and other laymen include:

Irish texts

High Middle Ages

Late Middle Ages

Renaissance

Enlightenment

Modern

Byzantine texts

See also: Basilikos logos.

Pre-Islamic Persian texts

Islamic texts

See also: Nasîhatnâme.

Slavonic texts

Chinese texts

Ancient

Imperial dynasties

Han dynasty

Tang dynasty

Song dynasty

Ming dynasty

Qing dynasty

In popular culture

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Compare:Book: Wilson. Suze. Cummings. Stephen. Jackson. Brad. Proctor-Thomson. Sarah. Revitalising Leadership: Putting Theory and Practice into Context. Routledge Studies in Leadership Research. Routledge. 2017. 9781317418122. 2017-10-22. Monarchy was then the most common form of governance in Europe, and the truth about leadership could be found in a genre of books known as 'mirrors for princes' [...]..
  2. A. Dubreucq (ed.), Jonas d'Orléans, Le métier du roi (De institutione regia). Sources Chrétiennes 407. Paris, 1995. pp. 45–9.
  3. Rob Meens. "Politics, mirrors of princes and the Bible: sins, kings and the well-being of the realm." Early Medieval Europe 7.3 (1998): 352
  4. Book: Audacht Morainn. 1976 . Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies . Fergus . Kelly. 0901282677.
  5. Book: Old Irish Wisdom Attributed to Aldfrith of Northumbria: An Edition of Bríathra Flainn Fhína Maic Ossu. Colin A.. Ireland. 0866982477. 1999. Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies .
  6. Book: Guibert de Tournai. Le traité Eruditio regum et principum de Guibert de Tournai : étude critique et texte inédit. 1914. de Poorter. A.. Louvain.
  7. Book: Vincent de Beauvais. De morali principis institutione. Brepols. 1995. Schneider. Robert J.. Turnhout.
  8. Schneider. Robert J.. Rouse. Richard H.. January 1991. The Medieval Circulation of the De morali principis institutione of Vincent of Beauvais. Viator. 22. 189–228. 10.1484/j.viator.2.301322. 0083-5897.
  9. M. Pinto de Mencses (ed.). Espelho dos Reis por Alvaro Pais. Lisbon, 1955.
  10. [Jean-Philippe Genet]
  11. Salter, F.M. "Skelton's Speculum Principis" Speculum 9 (1934): 25–37
  12. Olden-Jørgensen, Sebastian (ed.). Alithia. Et dansk fyrstespejl til Christian IV. UJDS-Studier 14. Copenhagen, 2003.
  13. Web site: Mirror for Princes.
  14. Web site: Āīn-nāmā . 2023-05-21 . Encyclopaedia Iranica . en-US.
  15. Web site: Andarz . 2023-05-21 . Encyclopaedia Iranica.
  16. Dunlop, D.M. (tr.). Fusul al-Madani: Aphorisms of the Statesman. University of Cambridge Oriental Publications. Cambridge, 1961.
  17. Encyclopedia: Bosworth . C.E. . C.E. Bosworth . al-Maghribī, al-Ḥusayn ibnʿAlī . Encyclopedia of Arabic Literature, Volume 2: L–Z, Chronological Tables, Index . Meisami . Julie Scott . Starkey . Paul . Routledge . 1998 . 0-415-18572-6 . 488 .
  18. https://archive.org/details/solwanorwatersof01ibnz Michele Amari (1852) Solwān; or Waters Of Comfort by Ibn Zafer, vol.1
  19. https://archive.org/details/solwanorwatersof02ibnz Michele Amari (1852) Solwān; or Waters Of Comfort by Ibn Zafer, vol.2
  20. Meisami, Julie Scott (tr.). Sea of Precious Virtues. Salt Lake City, 1991.
  21. [Sajida Alvi|Sajida Sultana Alvi]
  22. Web site: Mirrors For Princes (2010): Torino Film Festival. 29 September 2023 .