Dodecasyllable verse () is a line of verse with twelve . 12 syllable lines are used in a variety of poetic traditions.
Dodecasyllabic meter was invented by Jacob of Serugh (d. 521), a Miaphysitism bishop.
With the so-called "political verse" (i.e. pentadecasyllable verse) it is the main metre of Byzantine poetry. It is also used in Italian and French poetry, and in poetry of the Croats (the most famous example being Marko Marulić). In an Anglo-Saxon and French context, the dodecasyllable is generally called the "alexandrine", after the French language equivalent.
|
|