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C - The Laus Spaniae of Isidore of Seville

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 July 2009

A. H. Merrills
Affiliation:
King's College, Cambridge
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Summary

TRANSLATION TAKEN FROM KENNETH BAXTER WOLF, CONQUERORS AND CHRONICLERS OF EARLY MEDIEVAL SPAIN, TRANSLATED TEXTS FOR HISTORIANS, 9 (LIVERPOOL, 1990), PP. 81–3

Of all the lands from the west to the Indies, you, Spain, O sacred and always fortunate mother of princes and peoples, are the most beautiful. Rightly are you now the queen of all provinces, from which not only the west, but also the east borrows its shining lights. You are the pride and the ornament of the world, the more illustrious part of the earth, in which the Getic people are gloriously prolific, rejoicing much and flourishing greatly.

Indulgent nature has deservedly enriched you with an abundance of everything fruitful. You are rich with olives, overflowing with grapes, fertile with harvests. You are dressed in corn, shaded with olive trees, covered with the vine. Your fields are full of flowers, your mountains full of trees, and your shores full of fish. You are located in the most favourable region in the world; neither are you parched by the summer heat of the sun, nor do you languish under the icy cold, but girded by a temperate band of sky, you are nourished by fertile west winds. You bring forth the fruits of the fields, the wealth of the mines, and beautiful and useful plants and animals. Nor are you to be held inferior in rivers, which the brilliant fame of your fair flock ennobles.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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