Pseudo-Origen
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Pseudo-Origen is the name conventionally given to anonymous authors whose works are misattributed to Origen and by extension to the works themselves.
Pseudo-Origine, Homilia VI in Matthaeum , Latin copy from 1179
These include:
De recta in Deum fide , a Greek dialogue of the late 3rd or early 4th century[ 1]
Planctus Origenis , also called Lamentum or Paenitentia , a purported retraction of some of his views regarded as heretical, supposedly translated from Greek into Latin by Jerome of Stridon [ 2]
Commentarius in Iob , a Latin commentary on Job from Vandal Africa [ 3]
De Maria Magdalena , a Latin homily on John 20 :11–18[ 4]
Vitae Mediatrix , 6th-century Latin treatise on the title Mediatrix [ 5]
Chronicle of Pseudo-Origen , a lost chronicle used as a source for the Collectio Hibernensis [ 6]
Six homilies on Luke and Matthew attributed to Origen in the homiliary compiled by Paul the Deacon for Charlemagne are usually regarded as misattributed,[ 7] [ 8] including:
Maria stabat ad monumentum , a Latin sermon, possibly by Odo of Morimond [ it ] , reportedly translated into German by Nikolaus Kempf [ 10]
Henri De Lubac , Theology in History , trans. Anne Englund Nash (Ignatius Press, 1996), p. 62.
Leslie Dossey, "The Last Days of Vandal Africa: An Arian Commentary on Job and Its Historical Context", The Journal of Theological Studies , N.S. 54 , 1 (2003): 60–138. JSTOR 23968969
John P. McCall, "Chaucer and the Pseudo Origen De Maria Magdalena : A Preliminary Study", Speculum 46 , 3 (1971): 491–509.
Michael O'Carroll, Theotokos: A Theological Encyclopedia of the Blessed Virgin Mary (Liturgical Press, 2000), p. 241.
Roy Flechner, "The Chronicle of Pseudo-Origen: Simulating a World Chronicle in Seventh-Century Ireland", Peritia 31 (2021): 89–106.
Jay Diehl, "Origen's Story: Heresy, Book Production, and Monastic Reform at Saint-Laurent de Liège", Speculum 95 , 4 (2020): 1058n. doi : 10.1086/710557
Zachary Guiliano, The Homiliary of Paul the Deacon: Religious and Cultural Reform in Carolingian Europe (Brepols, 2021), p. 109.
Anne J. Duggan, "The Salem FitzStephen: Heidelberg Universitäts-Bibliothek Cod. Salem ix. 30", Thomas Becket: Friends, Networks, Texts and Cult (Variorum Reprints, 2007), pp. 51–86.
Dennis D. Martin, Fifteenth-Century Carthusian Reform: The World of Nicholas Kempf (Brill, 1992), p. 305.