The Three Kings of Cologne:
Edited from London, Lambeth Palace MS 491.
Edited by Frank Schaer. Middle English Texts, 31. Heidelberg: C. Winter,
2000. Pp. 203. EUR 46; SFr 79.
In its various forms the story of the visit of the Magi to the infant
Jesus is a grand, chronologically vast, panhistorical narrative. It unites
Biblical and apocryphal incidents with accounts from foreign lands, saints'
lives, and various other items of religious and scientific lore, such
as the noises made by the rising sun in the land of the Magi. The great
names appear: Melchior, Balthazar, Caspar (the African Magus), Prester
John, Balaam, Alexander, Constantine, Helena, Julian the Apostate, Thomas,
Mohammed, Origen. Likewise, we find the history of the thirty pennies
as they make their way from Ninus to Terah to Abraham to the Ishmaelites
to Joseph's brothers to Joseph to the queen of Sheba to Solomon to the
king of Araby to Melchior to Mary to an anonymous Bedouin to the Priest
of the Temple, to Judas Iscariot. The narrative demonstrates the medieval
penchant for accretion and copious synthesis as well as the medieval conviction
that all histories are providentially entwined.
James H. Morey
Emory University |
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