The humanist Hermann Schotten or Hermannus Schottennius Hessus (c. 1503-1546) student schoolmaster and university lecturer in Cologne was the author of a number of works on humanist pedagogy. His Confabulationes tironum litterariorum of 1525 a collection of Latin dialogues designed to help schoolboys master Classical Latin conversation was written in admiring imitation of the colloquies of Erasmus. But Schotten had his own distinctive style: a natural ear for dialogue and a sympathetic understanding of the schoolboy world. As a result he produced one of the liveliest pedagogical works of the century and a vivid and valuable cultural document of life in the early modern metropolis of Cologne. This critical edition of the Confabulationes the first since the sixteenth century makes this one-time best-seller available and comprehensible to modern readers. It presents the Latin text a full English translation and extensive notes on the language and on Schotten's many literary and cultural allusions accompanied by a detailed investigation of the early printing history of the collection.