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WIDUKIND

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 621 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WIDUKIND  , Saxon historian, was the author of Res gestae Saxonicae . Nothing is known of his

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life except that he was a monk at the
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Benedictine abbey of
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Corvey, and that he died about 1004, although various other conjectures have been formed by students of his
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work . He is also supposed to have written lives of St Paul and St
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Thecla, but no traces of these now remain . It is uncertain whether he was a
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resident at the court of the emperor
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Otto the
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Great or not, and also whether he was on intimate terms with Otto's illegitimate son William, archbishop of Mainz . His Res gestae Saxonicae, dedicated to Matilda, abbess of Quedlinburg, who was a daughter of Otto the Great, is divided into three books, and the greater
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part of it was undoubtedly written during the lifetime of the emperor, probably about 968 . Starting with certain surmises upon the origin of the
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Saxons, he deals with the war between Theuderich I., king of
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Austrasia, and the Thuringians, in which the Saxons played an important part . An allusion to the conversion of the
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race to
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Christianity under Charlemagne brings him to the early Saxon dukes and the reign of Henry the Fowler, whose
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campaigns are referred to in some detail . The second
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book opens with the election of Otto the Great as German king, treats of the risings against his authority, and concludes with the
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death of his wife Edith in 946 . In the third book the historian deals with Otto's expedition into France, his troubles with his son Ludolf and his son-in-law, Conrad the Red, duke of
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Lorraine, and the various
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wars in Germany; but makes only casual reference to Otto's visits to Italy in 951 and 962 . He gives a vivid account of the defeat of the Hungarians on the Lechfeld in August 955, and ends with the death of Otto in 973 and a eulogy on his life . Widukind formed his style upon that of Sallust; he was familiar with the De vitis Caesarum of Suetonius, the Vita Karoli magni of Einhard, and probably with Livy and Bede . Many quotations from the Vulgate are found in his writings, and there are traces of a knowledge of Virgil, Ovid and other
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Roman poets .

His sentences are occasionally abrupt and lacking in clearness, his Latin words are sometimes germanized (as when he writes michi for mihi) and grammatical errors are not always absent . The earlier part of his work is taken from tradition, but he wrote the contemporary part as one familiar with court life and the events of the

day . He says very little about affairs outside Germany, and although laudatory of monastic life gives due prominence to secular affairs . He writes as a Saxon, proud of the
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history of his race and an admirer of Henry the Fowler and Otto the Great . Three
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manuscripts exist of the Res gestae, one of which is in the
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British Museum, and the book was first published at Basel in 1532 . The best edition is that edited by G . Waitz in the Monumenta Germaniae historica . Scriptores,
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Band iii . (Hanover and Berlin, 1826) . A good edition published at Hanover and
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Leipzig in 1904 contains an introduction by K . A . Kehr .

See R . Kopke, Widukind von Convey (Berlin, 1867) ; J . Raase, Widukind von Korvei (

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Rostock, 188o): and B . Simson, " Zur Kritik
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des Widukind " in the Neues Archiv der Gesellschaft fiir dltere deutsche Geschichte, Band xii . (Hanover, 1876) . (A . W .

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