Online Encyclopedia

ALCUIN (Marmara)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 530 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

ALCUIN (Marmara)  , a celebrated ecclesiastic and man of learning in the 8th century, who liked to be called by the Latin name of ALBINUS, and at the Academy of the palace took the surname of
See also:
FLACCUS, was born at Eboracum (York) in 735 . He was related to Willibrord, the first bishop of Utrecht, whose biography he afterwards wrote . He was educated at the
See also:
cathedral school of York, under the celebrated master 'Elbert, with 'whom he also went to Rome in search of
See also:
manuscripts . When 'Elbert was appointed archbishop of York in 766, Alcuin succeeded him in the headship of the episcopal school . He again went to Rome in 78o, to fetch the
See also:
pallium for Archbishop Eanbald, and at
See also:
Parma met Charlemagne, who persuaded him to come to his court, and gave him the possession of the
See also:
great abbeys of Ferrieres and of Saint-Loup at
See also:
Troyes . The king counted on him to accomplish the great
See also:
work which was his dream, namely, to make the Franks familiar with the rules of the Latin language, to create
See also:
schools and to revive learning . From 781 to 790 Alcuin was his
See also:
sovereign's
See also:
principal helper in this enterprise . He had as pupils the king of the Franks, the members of his
See also:
family and the young clerics attached to the palace
See also:
chapel; he was the
See also:
life and soul of the Academy of the palace, and we have still, in the
See also:
Dialogue of Pepin (son of Charlemagne) and Alcuin, a sample of the intellectual exercises in which they indulged . It was under his inspiration that Charles wrote his famous letter de litteris colendis (Boretius, Capitularia, i. p . 78), and it was he who founded a
See also:
fine library in the palace . In 790 Alcuin returned to his own country, to which he had always been greatly attached, and stayed there some time; but Charlemagne needed him to combat the Adoptianist
See also:
heresy, which was at that time making great progress in the marches of Spain . At the council of
See also:
Frankfort in 794 Alcuin. upheld the orthodox
See also:
doctrine, and obtained the condemnation of the heresiarch Felix of Urgel .

After this victory he again returned to his own

See also:
land, but on account of the disturbances which broke out there, and which led to the
See also:
death of King !
See also:
Ethelred (796), he bade farewell to it for ever . Charlemagne had just given him the great abbey of St Martin at
See also:
Tours, and there, far from the disturbed life of the court, he passed his last years . He made the abbey school into a model of excellence, and many students flocked to it; .he had numerous manuscripts copied, the calligraphy of which is of extraordinary beauty (v . Leopold Delisle in the Memoires de l'Academie
See also:
des Inscriptions, vol. xxxii., 1st
See also:
part, 1885) . He wrote numerous letters to his friends in England, to Arno, bishop of
See also:
Salzburg, and above all to Charlemagne . These letters, of which 311 are extant, are filled chiefly with pious meditations, but they further form a mine of information as to the
See also:
literary and social conditions of the time, and are the most reliable authority for the
See also:
history of humanism in the Carolingian age . He also trained the numerous monks of the ALCUIN abbey in piety, and it was in the midst of these pursuits that he was struck down by death on the 19th of May 804 . Alcuin is the most prominent figure of the Carolingian Renaissance, in which have been distinguished three main periods: in the first of these, up to the arrival of Alcuin at the court, the Italians occupy the chief place; in the second, Alcuin and the Anglo-
See also:
Saxons are dominant; in the third, which begins in 804, the influence of the Goth
See also:
Theodulf is preponderant . Alcuin transmitted to the ignorant Franks the knowledge of Latin culture which had existed in England since the time of Bede . We still have a number of his
See also:
works . His letters have already been mentioned; his
See also:
poetry is equally interesting . Besides some graceful epistles in the style of Fortunatus, he wrote some long poems, and notably a whole history in verse of the church at York: Versus de patribus, regibus et sanctis Eboracensis ecclesiae .

We owe to him, too, some manuals used in his educational.work; a

grammar and works on rhetoric and dialectics . They are written in the form of dialogues, and in the two last the interlocutors are King Charles and Alcuin . He wrote, finally, several theological
See also:
treatises: a
See also:
treatise de Fide Trinitatis, commentaries on the Bible, &c . The
See also:
complete works of Alcuin have been edited by Froben: Alcuini opera, 1 vol. in 4 parts (Regensburg, 1777); this edition is reproduced in Migne's Patrolog.
See also:
lat. vols. c. and ci . The letters have been published by Jaffe and Dummler in Jaffe's Bibliotheca rerum germanicarum, vol . Vi. pp . 132-897 (1873) . E . Dummler has also published an authoritative edition, Epistolae aevi Carolini, vol. ii. pp . 1-481, in the Monunienta Germaniae, and has edited the poems in the same collection: Poetae latini aevi Carolini, vol. i. pp . 169-341 .

End of Article: ALCUIN (Marmara)
[back]
ALCOY
[next]
ALCYONE, or HALCYONE

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.