Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
Alcuin
(Alhwin, Alchoin; Latin Albinus, also Flaccus).
An eminent educator, scholar, and theologian born about 735; died 19 May, 804.
He came of noble Northumbrian parentage, but the place of his birth is a matter
of dispute. It was probably in or near York. While still a mere child, he
entered the cathedral school founded at that place by Archbishop Egbert. His
aptitude, and piety early attracted the attention of Aelbert, master of the
school, as well as of the Archbishop, both of whom devoted special attention to
his instruction. In company with his master, he made several visits to the
continent while a youth, and when, in 767, Aelbert succeeded to the
Archbishopric of York, the duty of directing the school naturally devolved upon
Alcuin. During the fifteen years that followed, he devoted himself to the work
of instruction at York, attracting numerous students and enriching the already
valuable library. While returning from Rome in March, 781, he met Charlemagne at
Parma, and was induced by that prince, whom he greatly admired, to remove to
France and take up residence at the royal court as Master of the Palace School
.
The school was kept at Aachen most of the time, but was removed from place to
place, according as the royal residence was changed. In 786 he returned to
England, in connection, apparently, with important ecclesiastical affairs, and
again in 790, on a mission from Charlemagne. Alcuin attended the Synod of
Frankfort in 794, and took an important part in the framing of the decrees
condemning Adoptionism as well as in the efforts made subsequently to effect the
submission of the recalcitrant Spanish prelates. In 796, when past his sixtieth
year, being anxious to withdraw from the world, he was appointed by Charlemagne
Abbot of St. Martin's at tours. Here, in his declining years, but with
undiminished zeal, he set himself to build up a model monastic school, gathering
books and drawing students, as before, at Aachen and York, from far and near. He
died 19 May, 804. Alcuin appears to have been only a deacon, his favourite
appellation for himself in his letters being Albinus, humilis Levita
. Some
have thought, however, that he became a priest, at least during his later years.
His unknown biographer, in describing this period, says of him, celebrabat omni
die missarum solemnia (Jaffé, Mon. Alcuin., Vita,
30). In one of his last
letters Alcuin acknowledged the gift of a casula, or chasuble, which he promises
to use in missarum solemniis (Ep. 203). It is probable that he was a monk, and a
member of the Benedictine Order, although this also has been disputed, some
historians maintaining that he was simply a member of the secular clergy, even
when he exercised the office of abbot at Tours.
I. EDUCATOR AND SCHOLAR
Of his work as an educator and scholar it may be said, in a general way, that he had the largest share in the movement for the revival of learning which distinguished the age in which he lived, and which made possible the great intellectual renaissance of three centuries later. In him Anglo-Saxon scholarship attained to its widest influence, the rich intellectual inheritance left by Bede at Jarrow being taken up by Alcuin at York, and, through his subsequent labours on the Continent, becoming the permanent possession of civilized Europe. The influences surrounding Alcuin at York were made up chiefly of elements from two sources, Irish and Continental. From the sixth century onward Irishmen were busy founding schools as well as churches and monasteries all over Europe; and from Iona, according to Bede, Aidan and other Celtic missionaries bore the knowledge of the classics, along with the light of the Christian faith, into Northumbria. Both Aldhelm and Bede had Irish teachers. Celtic scholarship appears, however, to have entered only remotely and indirectly into Alcuin's training. The strongly Roman cast which characterized the School of Canterbury, founded by Theodore and Hadrian, who were sent by the Pope to England in 669, was naturally reproduced in the School of Jarrow, and from this, in turn, in the School of York. The influence is discernible in Alcuin, on the religious side, in his devoted adhesion to Roman, as distinguished from particular local or national, traditions, as well as, in an intellectual way, in the fact that his knowledge of Greek, which was a favourite study with Irish scholars, appears to have been very slight.
An important feature of Alcuin's educational work at York was the care and
preservation, as well as the enlargement, of its precious library. Several times
he journeyed through Europe for the purpose of copying and collecting books.
Numerous pupils, too, gathered around him, from all parts of England and the
continent. In his poem On the Saints of the Church of York
, written, probably,
before he took up his residence in France, he has left us a valuable description
of the academic life at York, together with a list of the authors represented by
its catalogue of books. The course of studies embraced, in the words of Alcuin,
liberal studies and the holy word
, or the seven liberal arts comprising the
trivium and the quadrivium, with the study of Scripture and the Fathers for
those more advanced. A feature of the school that deserves mention was the
organization of studies on the modern plan, the students being separated into
classes, according to the subjects and divisions of subjects studied, with a
special teacher for each class. But it was when he took charge of the Palace
School that the abilities of Alcuin were most conspicuously shown. In spite of
the influence of York, learning in England was declining. The country was a prey
to dissensions and civil wars, and Alcuin perceived in the growing power of
Charlemagne and his eagerness for the development of learning an opportunity
such as even York, with all its pre-eminence and scholastic advantages, could
not afford. Nor was he disappointed. Charlemagne counted on education to
complete the work of empire-building in which he was engaged, and his mind was
busy with educational projects. A literary revival, in fact, had already begun.
Scholars were drawn from Italy, Germany, and Ireland, and when Alcuin, in 782,
transferred his allegiance to Charlemagne, he soon found surrounding him at
Aachen, in addition to the youthful members of the nobility he was called upon
to instruct, a band of older learners some of whom were ranked among the best
scholars of the time. Under his leadership the Palace School became what Charles
had hoped to make it, the centre of knowledge and culture for the whole kingdom,
and indeed for the whole of Europe. Charlemagne himself, his queen, Luitgard,
his sister Gisela, his three sons and two daughters became pupils of the school,
an example which the rest of the nobility were not slow to imitate. Alcuin's
supreme merit as an educator lay, however, not merely in the training up of a
generation of educated men and women, but above all, in inspiring with his own
enthusiasm for learning and teaching the talented youths who flocked to him from
all sides. His educational writings, comprising the treatises On Grammar
, On
Orthography
, On Rhetoric and the Virtues
, On Dialectics
, the Disputation
with Pepin
, and the astronomical treatise entitled De Cursu et Saltu Lunae ac
Bissexto
, afford an insight into the matter and methods of teaching employed in
the Palace School and the schools of the time generally, but they are not
remarkable either for originality or literary excellence. They are mostly
compilations - generally in the form of dialogues drawn from the works of
earlier scholars, and were probably intended to be used as textbooks by his own
pupils.
Alcuin, like Bede, was a teacher rather than a thinker, a gatherer and a
distributor rather than an originator of knowledge, and in this respect, it is
plain to us now, the bent of his genius responded perfectly to the imperative
intellectual need of the age, which was the preservation and the representation
to the world of the treasures of knowledge inherited from the past, long buried
out of sight by the successive tides of barbarian invasion. Disce ut doceas
(learn in order to teach) was the motto of his life, and the supreme value he
attached to the office of teaching is recognizable in his admonition to his
disciples that the idle youth would never become a teacher in his old age (Qui
non discit in pueritia, non docet in senectute, Ep. 27). Alcuin was eminently
qualified to be the schoolmaster of his age. Although living in the world and
occupied much with public affairs, he was a man of singular humility and
sanctity of life. He had an unbounded enthusiasm for learning and a tireless
zeal for the practical work of the class-room and library, and the young men of
talent whom he drew in crowds around him from all parts of Europe went away
inspired with something of his own passionate ardour for study. His warm-hearted
and affectionate disposition made him universally beloved, and the ties that
bound master and pupil often ripened into intimate friendship that lasted
through life. Many of his letters that have been preserved were written to his
former pupils, more than thirty being addressed to his tenderly loved disciple
Arno, who became Archbishop of Salzburg. Before he died Alcuin had the
satisfaction of seeing the young men whom he had trained engaged all over Europe
in the work of teaching. Wherever
, says Wattenbach, in speaking of the period
that followed, anything of literary activity is visible, there we can with
certainty count on finding a pupil of Alcuin's.
Many of his pupils came to
occupy important positions in Church and State and lent their influence to the
cause of learning, as the above-mentioned Arno, Archbishop of Salzburg;
Theodulph, Bishop of Orleans; Eanbald, Archbishop of York; Adelhard, the cousin
of Charles, who became Abbot of (New) Corbie, in Saxony; Aldrich, Abbot of
Ferrières, and Fridugis, the successor of Alcuin at Tours. Among his pupils also
was the celebrated Rabanus Maurus, the intellectual successor of Alcuin, who
came to study under him for a time at Tours, and who subsequently in his school
at Fulda, continued the work of Alcuin at Aachen and Tours.
The development of the Palace School, however, important as it was, was only
a part of the broad educational plans of Charlemagne. For the diffusion of
learning, other educational centers had to be established throughout the kingdom,
and for this, in an age when education was so largely, under the control of the
Church, it was essential that the clergy should be a body of educated men. With
this object in view, a series of decrees or capitulars were issued in the name
of the Emperor, which enjoined upon all clerics, secular as well as regular,
under penalty of suspension deprivation of office, the ability to read and write
and the possession of the knowledge requisite for the intelligent performance of
the duties of the clerical state. Reading-schools were to be established for the
benefit of candidates for the priesthood, and bishops were required to examine
their clergy from time to time, to ascertain the degree of their compliance with
these educational laws. A scheme for universal elementary education was also
projected. A capitular of the year 802 enjoined that everyone should send his
son to study letters, and that the child should remain at school with all
diligence until he should become well instructed in learning
(West, 54).
Following the decrees of the Council of Vaison, a primary school was to be
established in every town and village to be taught by the priests gratuitously.
It is impossible to say to what extent Alcuin deserves credit for the
organization of the vast educational system which was thus set up, comprising a
central higher institution, the Palace School, a number of subordinate schools
of the liberal arts scattered throughout the country, and schools for the common
people in every city and village. His hand is nowhere visible in the series of
legislative enactments referred to; but there can be no doubt that he had much
to do with the instigation, if not with the framing, of these laws.
(Gaskoin, 209). Alcuin's poems range from brief, epigrammatic verses,
addressed to his friends, or intended as inscriptions for books, churches,
altars, etc., to lengthy metrical histories of biblical and ecclesiastical
events. His verses seldom rise to the level of real poetry, and, like most of
the work of the poets of the period, they often fail to conform to the rules for
quantity, just as his prose, though simple and vigorous, shows here and there a
seeming disregard for the accepted canons of syntax. His principal metrical work,
the The voice
,
Gaskoin aptly says, is the voice of Charles, but the hand is the hand of
Alcuin
. It was with Alcuin, too, and his pupils that the responsibility rested
for carrying out the legislation. True, the laws were only imperfectly carried
into effect; the measures planned and partially put into practice for the
enlightenment of the people did not meet with complete success; the movement for
the revival and diffusion of learning throughout the Empire did not last. Yet
much was accomplished that did endure. The accumulated wisdom or the past, which
was in danger of perishing, was preserved, and when the greater and more
permanent renaissance of learning came, several centuries later, when the light
began to pierce through the storm-clouds of feudal strife and anarchy, the
foundations laid in the eighth century were still there, ready to receive the
weight of the higher learning which the scholars of the new revival should build
upPoem on the Saints of the Church at York
, consists of 1657 hexameter lines
and is really a history of that Church.
II. ALCUIN AS A THEOLOGIAN
Alcuin's work as a theologian may be classed as exegetical or biblical, moral,
and dogmatic. Here again the characteristic that has been noted in his
educational work is conspicuous it is that of conservation rather than
originality. His nine Scriptural commentaries - on Genesis, The Psalms, The
Song of Solomon, Ecclesiastes, Hebrew Names, St. John's Gospel, the Epistles to
Titus, Philemon, and the Hebrews, The Sayings of St. Paul, and the Apocalypse -
consist mostly of sentences taken from the Fathers, the idea, apparently, being
to collect into convenient form the observations on the more important
Scriptural passages of the best commentators who had preceded him. A more
important Biblical undertaking by Alcuin was the revision of the text of the
Latin Vulgate. At the beginning of the ninth century, this version had displaced
in France, as elsewhere throughout the Western Church, the Old Itala (Vetus
Itala) and other Latin versions of the Bible; but the Vulgate, as it existed,
showed many variants from the original of St. Jerome. Uniformity in the sacred
text was in fact, unknown. Every church and monastery had its own accepted
readings, and varying texts were often to be found in the Bibles used in the
same house. Other scholars besides Alcuin were engaged in the task of
endeavouring to remedy this condition. Theodulph of Orléans produced a revised
text of the Vulgate which has survived in the Codex Memmianus
. The original
work of Alcuin has not come down to us, the carelessness of copyists and the
extensive usage to which it attained having led to numberless, though for the
most part unimportant variations from the standard he sought to fix. In his
letters he simply mentions the fact that he is engaged, by the order of
Charlemagne, in emendatione Veteris Novique Testamenti
(Ep., 136). Four Bibles
are shown by the dedicatory poems affixed to them to have been prepared by him,
or under his direction at Tours, probably during the years 799-801. In the
opinion of Berger the Tours Bibles
all represent in a greater or less degree,
notwithstanding their variations in detail, the original Alcuinian text (Hist.
de la vulg., 242). Whatever the exact changes made by Alcuin in the Bible text
may have been, the known temper of the man, no less than the limits of the
scholarship of the age, makes it certain that these changes were not of a
far-reaching kind. The idea being, however, to reproduce the genuine text of St.
Jerome, so far as possible, and to correct the gross blunders which disfigured
the Sacred writings, the Biblical work of Alcuin was, from this point of view,
important. Of the three brief moral treatises Alcuin has left us, two, De
virtutibus et vitiis
, and De animae ratione
, are largely abridgments of the
writing of St. Augustine on the same subjects, while the third, On the
Confession of Sins
, is a concise exposition of the nature of confession,
addressed to the monks of St. Martin of Tours. Closely allied to his moral
writings in spirit and purpose are his sketches of the lives of St. Martin of
Tours, St. Vedast, St. Riquier, and St. Willibrord, the last being a biography
of considerable length.
It is upon his dogmatic writings that the fame of Alcuin as a theologian
principally rests. Against the Adoptionist heresy he stood forth as the foremost
champion of the Church. It is a proof of his power of penetration - a quality
of mind which some historians appear to deny him altogether - that he so clearly
perceived the essentially heretical attitude of Felix and Elipandus toward the
Christological question, an attitude whose heterodoxy was shrouded perhaps even
from their own eyes in the beginning, by the specious distinction between
natural and adoptive sonship; and it was a worthy tribute to the range of his
patristic scholarship when Felix, the chief intellectual defender of Adoptionism,
after the disputation with Alcuin at Aachen, acknowledged the error of his
position. The condemnation of the rising heresy by the Synod of Regensburg
(Ratisbon), in 792, having failed to check its spread, another and a larger
synod, composed of representatives of the Churches of France, Italy, Britain,
and Galicia, was convened at Frankfort by the order of Charles, in 794. Alcuin
was present at this meeting and no doubt took a prominent part in the
discussions and in the drawing up of the Epistola Synodica
, although, with
characteristic modesty, he furnishes no evidence of the fact in his letters.
Following up the work of the Synod, he addressed to Felix, for whom he had
formerly entertained high esteem, a touching letter of admonition and
exhortation. After his transfer to Tours, in 796, he received from Felix a reply
which showed that something more than friendly entreaty would be needed to stay
the progress of the heresy. He had already drawn up a small treatise consisting
mainly of patristic quotations, against the teaching of the heretics, under the
title Liber Albini contra haeresim Felicis
, and he now undertook a larger and
more thorough discussion of the theological questions involved. This work, in
seven books, Libri VII adversus Felicem
, was a refutation of the position of
the Adoptionists, rather than an exposition of Catholic doctrine, and hence
followed the lines of their arguments, instead of a strictly logical order of
development. Alcuin urged against the Adoptionists the universal testimony of
the Fathers, the inconsistencies involved in the doctrine itself, its logical
relation to Nestorianism, and the rationalistic spirit which was forever
prompting to just such attempted human explanations of the unsearchable
mysteries of faith. In the spring of 799 a disputation took place between Alcuin
and Felix in the royal palace at Aachen, which ended by Felix acknowledging his
errors and accepting the teachings of the Church. Felix subsequently paid a
friendly visit to Alcuin at Tours. Having sought in vain to bring about the
submission of Elipandus, Alcuin drew up another treatise entitled Adversus
Elipandum Libri IV
, entrusting it for circulation to the commissioners whom
Charlemagne was sending to Spain. In 802 he sent to the emperor the last, and
perhaps the most important, of his theological treatises, the Libellus de
Sancta Trinitate
, a work which is uncontroversial in form, although probably
suggested to him during the discussions with the Adoptionists. The treatise
contains a brief appendix entitled De Trinitate ad Fridegisum quaestiones
XXVIII
. The book is a compendium of Catholic doctrine concerning the Holy
Trinity, St. Augustine's treatise on the subject being kept steadily in view. It
is uncertain to what extent Alcuin shared in the attitude of remonstrance
assumed by the Frankish Church, at the instance of Charlemagne, towards the
badly translated and ill understood decrees of the second Council of Nicaea,
held in 787. The style of the Libri Carolini
which condemn, in the name of the
King, the decrees of the Council, favours the assumption that Alcuin had at
least no direct part in the composition of the work.
III. ALCUIN AS A LITURGIST
Besides his justly merited fame as an educator and a theologian, Alcuin has
the honour of having been the principle agent in the great work of liturgical
reform accomplished by the authority of Charlemagne. At the accession of Charles
the Gallican rite prevailed in France, but it was so modified by local customs
and traditions as to constitute a serious obstacle to complete ecclesiastical
unity. It was the purpose of the King to substitute the Roman rite in place of
the Gallican, or at least to bring about such a revision of the latter as to
make it substantially one with the Roman. The strong leaning of Alcuin towards
the traditions of the Roman Church, combined with his conservative character and
the universal authority of his name, qualified him for the accomplishment of a
change which the royal authority in itself was powerless to effect. The first of
Alcuin's liturgical works appears to have been a Homiliary, or collection of
sermons in Latin for the use of priests. The Homiliary which was printed under
his name in the fifteenth century was by a different hand, although it is
probable, its Dom Morin contends, that a recently discovered manuscript of the
twelfth century contains the genuine Alcuinian sermons. Another liturgical work
of Alcuin consists of a collection of the Epistles to be read on Sundays and
holy-days throughout the year, and bears the name, Comes ab Albino ex Caroli
imp. praecepto emendatus
. As, previous to his time, the portions of Scripture
to be read at Mass were often merely indicated on the margins of the Bibles used,
the Comes
commended itself by its convenience, and as he followed Roman usage
here also, the result was another advance in the way of conformity to the Roman
liturgy. The work of Alcuin which had the greatest and most lasting influence in
this direction, however, was the Sacramentary, or Missal which he compiled,
using the Gregorian Sacramentary as a basis, and to this adding a supplement of
other liturgical sources. Prescribed as the official Mass-book for the Frankish
Church, Alcuin's Missal soon came to be commonly used throughout Europe and was
largely instrumental in bringing about uniformity in respect to the liturgy of
the Mass in the whole Western Church. Other liturgical productions of Alcuin
were a collection of votive Masses, drawn up for the monks of Fulda, a treatise
called De psalmorum usu
, a breviary for laymen, and a brief explanation of the
ceremonies of Baptism.
A complete edition of Alcuin's works, with the exception of some of his
Epistles, is to be found in Migne, comprising volumes 100-101 of the Patrologia
Latina
. The text of the Migne edition was first published by Froben, Abbot of
St. Emmeran, at Ratisbon, in 1777, a previous and and less complete edition
having been published by Duchesne at Paris, in 1617. A critically accurate
edition of the Epistles
of Alcuin, together with his poem, On the Saints of
the Church at York
, his Life of St. Willibrord and the
Life of Alcuin
,
composed about 829, is found in the fourth volume of the Bibliotheca Rerum
Germanicarum
, under the title Monumenta Alcuiniana
edited by Jaffé,
Wattenbach, and Duemmler (Berlin, 1873). This edition contains 293 of Alcuin's
Epistles, against the 230 in Migne.
Heiligenlexikon als USB-Stick oder als DVD
Unterstützung für das Ökumenische Heiligenlexikon
Artikel kommentieren / Fehler melden
Suchen bei amazon: Bücher über Catholic Encyclopedia - Alcuin
Wikipedia: Artikel über Catholic Encyclopedia - Alcuin
Fragen? - unsere FAQs antworten!
Impressum - Datenschutzerklärung
korrekt zitieren: Artikel
Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet das Ökumenische Heiligenlexikon in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über https://d-nb.info/1175439177 und https://d-nb.info/969828497 abrufbar.