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ARN See also: bishop and afterwards archbishop of See also: Salzburg, entered the See also: church at an early age, and after passing some
See also: time at See also: Freising became See also: abbot of Elnon, or St Amandas it was afterwards called, where he made the acquaintance of
See also: Alcuin
.
In 785 he was made bishop of Salzburg and in 787 was employed by Tassilo III., duke of the Bavarians, as an See also: envoy to Charlemagne at See also: Rome
.
He appears to have attracted the See also: notice of the Frankish See also: king, through whose influence in 798 Salzburg was made the seat of an archbishopric; and
See also: Arno, as the first holder of this office, became metropolitan of See also: Bavaria and received the See also: pallium from See also: Pope See also: Leo III
.
The See also: area of his authority was extended to the See also: east by the conquests of Charlemagne over the See also: Avars, and he began to take a prominent See also: part in the See also: government of Bavaria
.
Ile acted as one of the missi dominici, and spent some time at the See also: court of Charlemagne, where he was known by the assembled scholars as Aquila, and his name appears as one of the signatories to the emperor's will
.
He established a library at Salzburg, furthered in other ways the interests of learning, and presided over several synods called to improve the condition of the church in Bavaria
.
Soon after the See also: death of Charlemagne in 814, Arno appears to have withdrawn from active Iife, although he retained his archbishopric until his death on the 24th of See also: January 821
.
Aided by a deacon named Benedict, Arno See also: drew up about 788 a See also: catalogue of lands and proprietary rights belonging to the church in Bavaria, under the title of Indiculus or Congestum Arnonis
.
An edition of this See also: work, which is of considerable value to See also: historical students, was published at See also: Munich in 1869 with notes by F
.
Keinz
.
Many other See also: works were produced under the See also: protection of Arno, among them a Salzburg consuetudinary, an edition of which appears in Quellen and Ererterungen zur bayrischen and deutschen Geschichte, See also: Band vii., edited by L
.
Rockinger (Munich, 1856) . It has been suggested by W. von See also: Giesebrecht that Arno was the author of an early section of Annales Laurissenses it ajores, which deals with the See also: history of the Frankish See also: kings from 741 to 829; and of which an edition appears in Monumenta Germaniae historica
.
Scriptores, Band i. pp
.
128-131, edited by G
.
II
.
See also: Pertz (See also: Hanover, 1826)
.
If this supposition be correct, Arno was the first extant writer to apply the name Deutsch (theodisca) to the See also: German language
.
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