The third and last group of the writings of Hrosvitha is that of her versified historical chronicles. At the request of the abbess Gerberga she composed her Carmen de Gestis Oddmis, an epic attempting in some degree to follow the great Roman model. It was completed by the year 968, and presented by the authoress to both the old emperor and his son (then already crowned as) Otto II. This poem so closely adheres to the materials supplied to the authoress by members of the imperial family that, notwithstanding its courtly omissions, it is regarded as an historical authority. Unfortunately only half of it remains; the part treating of the period from 953 to 962 is lost with the exception of a few fragments, and the period from 962 to 967 is summarized only. Subsequently, in a poem (of 837 hexameters) De Primwdiis Cocnohii G under skeimensis, Hrosvitha narrated the beginnings of her own convent, and its history up to the year 919.
The Munich MS., which contains all the works enumerated above except the Chronicle of Gandershcim, was edited by the great Vienna humanist Celtesin 1501, and re-edited by the learned PI. L. Schurzfleisch in 1707. The comedies have been translated into German by Bendixeu (Liibeck, 1858), and into French by A. Magnin (Paris, 1845). whose introduction gives a full account of the authoress an 1 her works. A copious analysis of these plays will be found in Klein, Gcschichtc des Dramas, iii. 665-754. Gustav Freytag is the author of a treatise DC llosuitha poetria (Breslau, 1839); and at the beginning of Colm’s Shaks]icare in German)/, Shakespearean parallels are suggested to certain passages in Hrosvitha’s dramas. Her two historical chronicles were edited by Pertz among the Monumenta Germanicc (vol. iv. ); for an apprecia tion of them see Wattenbach, Gcschichtsqucllen, 214-216, and Giesebrecht, Deutsche Kaiserzeit, i. 780, who mentions a German translation by Pfund. There is a complete edition of the works of Hrosvitha by K. A. Barack (Nuremberg, 1858). J. Aschbach (1867) attempted to prove that Celtes had forged the productions which he published under the name of Hrosvitha, but he was refuted by R. Kopke (Berlin, 1869).
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HUANCAVELICA, or Guancabelica, the chief town of a department of same name, Peru, is situated in a deep ravine, of an average width of one mile, at about 12,400 feet above sea level, and 160 miles south-east of Lima. It is well and regularly built, the houses being of stone, while several stone bridges span the stream that flows through the town. Huancavelica was founded in 1572 as a mining town by the viceroy Francisco de Toledo, and mining has continued to be the principal employment of the inhabitants. Close by is the famous quicksilver mine of Santa Barbara, with its subterranean San Rosario church, cut out of the cinnabar. Population in 1876, 3937.
HUANUCO, or Guanuco, the chief town of the Peruvian department of the same name, is situated on the left bank of the river Huallaga near its junction with the Higueras, in a beautiful valley nearly 6000 feet above sea-level, and 180 miles north-west of Lima. The streets are laid out regularly, but the houses are mean-looking. As nearly every house is surrounded by a garden the limits of the town embrace a large area. Sweetmeats for the Lima market are almost the only manufacture, most of the inhabitants being engaged in mining and farming. Huanuco was founded in 1539 by Gomez Alvarado, and was shortly afterwards raised to a bishopric. In 1812 during an insurrection of the Indians of Panao it was plundered. The population in 1876 was 5263.
HUARAZ, chief town of the Peruvian department of Ancachs, and of a district to which it gives its name, is situated on the left bank of the river Santa, in a fertile valley of the Andes, about 190 miles N.N.W. of Lima. There is some export trade in cattle, wheat, sugar, and fruit; and in the vicinity considerable quantities of gold, silver, and copper are mined. A state railway 172 miles long, of which 82 miles are completed, is designed to connect Huaraz with Chimbote on the coast. Near the town there are ruins in the second or Cyclopean stj leof Inca architecture, sufficiently like the remains at Tiahnanca to allow us to assign Huaraz as the northern limit of the prehistoric Incarial empire, of which Tiahnanca w;;s the southern boundary. Population in 1876, 4851.