Artes Mechanicae

"Mechanical arts": a medieval concept of ordered practices or skills, often juxtaposed to the traditional seven liberal arts Artes liberales. Also called "servile" and considered "vulgar"[1], from antiquity they had been deemed unbecoming for a free man, as ministering to baser needs.

Already Johannes Scotus Eriugena (9th century) divides them somewhat arbitrarily into seven parts:

In his "Didascalicon", Hugh of St Victor includes navigation, medicine and theatrical arts instead of commerce, agriculture and cooking.[3] Hugh's treatment somewhat elevates the mechanical arts as ordained to the improvement of humanity, a promotion which was to represent a growing trend among late medievals.[4]

The classification of the Artes Mechanicae as applied geometry was introduced to Western Europe by Dominicus Gundissalinus under the influence of his readings in Arabic scholarship.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ See for instance Cicero'sDe Officiis, Book I, xxlii.
  2. ^ In his commentary on Martianus Capella's early fifth century work, The Marriage of Philology and Mercury, one of the main sources for medieval reflection on the liberal arts.
  3. ^ Hugues de Saint-Victor, Libri septem eruditiones didascaliae, ch.26 (PL 176, col.760): lanificium, armaturum, navigationem, agriculturem, venationem, medicinam, theatricam
  4. ^ See Georges Legoff, Time, Work and Culture in the Middle Ages, (Chicago, University of Chicago Press) 116.

References