The Dialogues (
Latin: Dialogi) of
Gregory the Great is a collection of four books of miracles, signs, wonders, and healings done by the holy men of sixth-century Italy.
Summary
Writing in Latin in a time of plague and war, Gregory structured his work as a conversation between himself and Peter, a
deacon.[1] His focus is on miraculous events in the lives of monastics.
The Dialogues were the most popular of Gregory's works during the Middle Ages, and in modern times have received more scholarly attention than the rest of his works combined.[3] From this, the author himself is sometimes known as Gregory the Dialogist.[4]
^Moorhead, John (2002). "The figure of the deacon Peter in the Dialogues of Gregory the Great". Augustinianum. 42 (2): 469–479.
doi:
10.5840/agstm20024227.
^Meyvaert, Paul (2004). "The Authentic Dialogues of Gregory the Great". Sacris Erudiri. 43: 55–130.
doi:
10.1484/j.se.2.300121.
^Demacopoulos, George (2010). "Gregory the Great and a Post-Imperial Discourse": 120–137.
doi:
10.7916/D88S505K. {{
cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (
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^Ivan Havener (1989), "The Greek Prologue to the Dialogues of Gregory the Great: The Critical Text", Revue bénédictine, 99 (1–2): 103–117,
doi:
10.1484/J.RB.4.01416.
External links
Text
A critical edition of the entire Dialogues in Latin with a Greek translation, in Sancti Gregorii Papae I, cognomento Magni, opera omnia jam olim ad manuscriptos codices Romanos, Gallicanos, Anglicanos emendata, aucta, & illustrata notis, studio & labore Monachorum
Ordinis Sancti Benedicti, e
Congregatione Sancti Mauri, published by Carobolus and Pompeiatus in Venice in 1769.