The Bern Riddles, also known as Aenigmata Bernensia, Aenigmata Hexasticha or Riddles of Tullius, are a collection of 64 rhythmic Latin riddles, named after the location of their earliest surviving manuscript, which today is held in Bern (though probably produced in Bourges): the early eighth-century Codex Bernensis 611.
Origin
Although it has been suggested that they were composed in late antiquity, most scholars consider that the Bern Riddles were inspired by the c. fourth-century collection of riddles attributed to Symphosius, and date to around 700 AD.
The author of the Bern Riddles is not known but the book might have been written by "a Lombard familiar with Mediterranean flora and food". According to Archer Taylor, "The Berne Riddles are especially interesting for the author's familiarity with the North Italian landscape and its plants. Whoever he was, we may safely call him the first medieval riddle-master in Italy". Some scholars have proposed that the Bern Riddles originated in early England, where several early medieval collections of verse riddles were created, including the Enigmata of Aldhelm. However, it is more probable that the Bern Riddles were written under the influence of Aldhelm's collection and therefore post-date it.
Subjects
The subjects of the Bern Riddles are as follows:
- 1. ' (pot)
- 2. ' (lamp)
- 3. ' (salt)
- 4. ' (stool)
- 5. ' (table)
- 6. ' (glass beaker)
- 7. ' (bladder)
- 8. ' (egg)
- 9. ' (millstone)
- 10. ' (ladder)
- 11. ' (ship)
- 12. ' (grain of corn)
- 13. ' (grapevine)
- 14. ' (olive)
- 15. ' (palm-tree)
- 16. ' (juniper berry)
- 17. ' (sieve)
- 18. ' (broom)
- 19. ' (beeswax)
- 20. ' (honey)
- 21. ' (bee)
- 22. ' (sheep)
- 23. ' (fire)
- 24. ' (parchment)
- 25. ' (letters)
- 26. ' (mustard)
- 27. ' (papyrus)
- 28. ' (silk)
- 29. ' (mirror)
- 30. ' (fish)
- 31. ' (siphon)
- 32. ' (sponge)
- 33. ' (violet)
- 34. ' (rose)
- 35. ' (lily)
- 36. ' (saffron)
- 37. ' (pepper)
- 38. ' (ice)
- 39. ' (ivy)
- 40. ' (mousetrap)
- 41. ' (wind)
- 42. ' (ice)
- 43. (silkworms)
- 44. ' (pearl)
- 45. ' (earth)
- 46. ' (hammer)
- 47. ' (chestnut)
- 48. ' (walnut)
- 49. ' (rain)
- 50. ' (wine)
- 50a. ' (parchment)
- 51. ' (garlic)
- 52. ' (rose)
- 53. [de pistillo] (pestle)
- 54. [de follibus] (bellows and purse)
- 55. ' (sun)
- 56. ' (word)
- 57. ' (sun)
- 58. ' (moon)
- 59. ' (moon)
- 60. ' (sky)
- 61. ' (shadow)
- 62. ' (stars)
- 63. ' (wine)
Examples
The riddles are written in Latin rhythmic hexameter.
Manuscripts
The Bern Riddles come down to us in the twelve medieval manuscripts, including:
Editions and translations
Key modern editions of the Bern Riddles include:
- 'Aenigmata in Dei nomine Tullii seu aenigmata quaestionum artis rhetoricae [aenigmata "bernensia"]', ed. by Fr. Glorie, trans. by Karl J. Minst, in , Corpus christianorum: series latina, 133-133a, 2 vols (Turnholt: Brepols, 1968), II 541âÂÂ610.
- Strecker, Karl (ed). âÂÂAenigmata Hexasticha.â MGH: Poetae Latini aevi Carolingi, Vol. 4.2; Berlin, 1914. pp. 732-759.
- The Bern Riddles, in The Riddle Ages: Old English Riddles, Translations and Commentaries, ed. by Megan Cavell and Neville Mogford, with Matthias Ammon and Victoria Symons (2013-). An edition and English translation of the Bern Riddles begun in 2020.
- Die Berner Rätsel / Aenigmata Bernensia: Lateinisch - deutsch, ed. and trans. by Dieter Bitterli (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2023),
References
Further reading
- Thomas Klein, 'Pater Occultus: The Latin Bern Riddles and Their Place in Early Medieval Riddling', Neophilologus 103 (2019): 399âÂÂ417,
- Neville Mogford, 'The Moon and Stars in the Bern and Eusebius Riddles', in Riddles at Work in the Early Medieval Tradition: Words, Ideas, Interactions, ed. by Megan Cavell and Jennifer Neville (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2020), pp. 230âÂÂ46 , .