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- Pentalogy abstract "A pentalogy (from Greek πεντα- penta-, \"five\" and -λογία -logia, \"discourse\") is a compound literary or narrative work that is explicitly divided into five parts. Although modern use of the word implies both that the parts are reasonably self-contained and that the structure was intended by the author, historically, neither was necessarily true: in fact, a pentalogia could be assembled by a later editor, just as Plotinus's Enneads were arranged in nines by Porphyry in order to create an overarching structure of six which would express the idea of perfection.In Western literature, the oldest quinary structure with great influence is the Torah or Pentateuch; in the Far East, it is the Five Classics. The most famous pentalogy in medieval literature is Nizami Ganjavi's Panj Ganj, or Khamsa (\"Five Treasures\"), a collection of five epics which was composed in the latter half of the 12th century. They were Makhzan al-Asrar, Khusraw o Shirin, Layli o Majnun, Eskandar-nameh, and Haft Paykar. The idea was widely imitated, the number five being seen as having mystical significance; for example, the 16th-century poet Faizi, the poet laureate of Akbar's court, attempted a work on the same scale, but completed only three of the intended five parts. Other famous examples include Amir Khusro: Khamsa-e-Nizami (13th century), a pentalogy of classical romances, and Ali-Shir Nava'i: Khamsa (16th century).The fivefold structure is usually first encountered by an English-speaking reader in the plays of William Shakespeare, which, like nearly all English, French and German plays of the period, are divided into five acts, even when the narrative of the play hardly seems to demand it; in his Essay on Comedy (1877), George Meredith wrote sardonically that \"Five is dignity with a trailing robe; whereas one, or two, or three acts would be short skirts, and degrading.\" The origin of this tradition was examined by Brander Matthews in A Book about the Theater. It could be traced to Horace:Brander explains that Horace came to this conclusion on the basis of the drama of Euripides:And apparently Euripides was far more interested in his play, in his plot, and in his characters, than in these extraneous lyric passages, so he reduced them to the lowest possible number, generally to four [...] separating the pathetic play into five episodes in dialog. The Alexandrian tragedians [...] accepted his form as final.Coming long after Horace, Seneca unhesitatingly accepted all the restrictions insisted upon by the Latin lyrist. [...] It is not to be wondered at that the Italian scholars of the Renascence followed the precept of Horace and the practise of Seneca. They were far more at home in Latin than they were in Greek; and they could hardly help reading into the literature of Athens what they were already familiar with in the authors of Rome. [...] So it is that Scaliger and Minturno prescribe five acts, and that Castelvetro [...] points out that poets seem to have found the five-act form most suitable. [... T]he French dramatic poems, composed a little later, were imitations of these Italians...Lawrence Durrell's pentalogy The Avignon Quintet (1974–85) is an example of the reappearance of numerological ideas in modern fiction. In an attempt to subvert the normal linear structure, Durrell explicitly specified it as a quincunx and related it to the Gnostical interpretations. The best-known discussion of this shape in English literature is Thomas Browne's essay The Garden of Cyrus, which relies on Pythagorean traditions, but Durrell goes much further afield, relating it to Angkor Wat and the Kundalini. The purpose of the work was to go beyond his previous tetralogy The Alexandria Quartet. In an interview, Durrell agreed with James P. Carley that \"Christianity as we know it is a quaternity with a suppressed fourth\" and a critic describes his ambition as being that of \"achieving the 'quintessence', that is in its combination of Eastern spirituality and Western science leading to the global vision of 'Reality Prime'.\"".
- Pentalogy thumbnail Quincunx.svg?width=300.
- Pentalogy wikiPageID "24132845".
- Pentalogy wikiPageLength "8863".
- Pentalogy wikiPageOutDegree "83".
- Pentalogy wikiPageRevisionID "675461726".
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink 5_(number).
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink 6_(number).
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Aether_(classical_element).
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Akbar.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Ali-Shir_Navai.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Amir_Khusrow.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greek.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink And_Another_Thing..._(novel).
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Angkor_Wat.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Antonio_Minturno.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Conan_Doyle.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Brander_Matthews.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Brandon_Mull.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Narrative_forms.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Series_of_books.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Cinda_Williams_Chima.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Douglas_Adams.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Enneads.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Eoin_Colfer.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Euripides.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Fablehaven.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Fablehaven:_Grip_of_the_Shadow_Plague.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Fablehaven:_Keys_to_the_Demon_Prison.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Fablehaven:_Rise_of_the_Evening_Star.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Fablehaven:_Secrets_of_the_Dragon_Sanctuary.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Fablehaven_(novel).
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Faizi.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Four_Books_and_Five_Classics.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink George_Meredith.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Gnosticism.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Hamsa.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink His_Last_Bow.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Horace.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Jean_Van_Leeuwen.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Julius_Caesar_Scaliger.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Khosrow_and_Shirin.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Kundalini.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Lawrence_Durrell.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Life,_the_Universe_and_Everything.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Lloyd_Alexander.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Lodovico_Castelvetro.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Lynne_Reid_Banks.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Mostly_Harmless.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Nizami_Ganjavi.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Numerology.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Perfect_number.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Plotinus.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Porphyry_(philosopher).
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Pythagoreanism.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Quincunx.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Seneca_the_Younger.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Sherlock_Holmes.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink So_Long,_and_Thanks_for_All_the_Fish.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Taran_Wanderer.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Tetralogy.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Adventures_of_Sherlock_Holmes.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Alexandria_Quartet.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Avignon_Quintet.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Black_Cauldron_(novel).
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Book_of_Three.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Case-Book_of_Sherlock_Holmes.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Castle_of_Llyr.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Chronicles_of_Prydain.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Garden_of_Cyrus.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Heir_Chronicles.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_High_King.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Hitchhikers_Guide_to_the_Galaxy.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Indian_in_the_Cupboard.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Memoirs_of_Sherlock_Holmes.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Restaurant_at_the_End_of_the_Universe.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Return_of_Sherlock_Holmes.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Seven_Beauties.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink The_Strand_Magazine.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Browne.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Torah.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Trilogy.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink Wiktionary:penta-.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink William_Shakespeare.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLink File:Quincunx.svg.
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLinkText "Pentalogy".
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLinkText "pentalogy".
- Pentalogy wikiPageWikiLinkText "series of five".
- Pentalogy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:For.
- Pentalogy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Pentalogy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Works_series.
- Pentalogy subject Category:Narrative_forms.
- Pentalogy subject Category:Series_of_books.
- Pentalogy hypernym Work.
- Pentalogy type Book.
- Pentalogy type TelevisionShow.
- Pentalogy type Book.
- Pentalogy type Term.
- Pentalogy comment "A pentalogy (from Greek πεντα- penta-, \"five\" and -λογία -logia, \"discourse\") is a compound literary or narrative work that is explicitly divided into five parts.".
- Pentalogy label "Pentalogy".