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Anecdota Mediaevalia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 July 2016

Marvin L. Colker*
Affiliation:
University of Virginia

Extract

The twelfth-century codex Beauvais 11 is rich in the possession of many medieval Latin verses. Of these almost all have by now been published: poems commonly assigned to Hildebert, by Bourassé; the De prelatis non bene intronizatis, by Rousseau; the ‘Mellifluae Meldi …,' by Lecomte and more recently by Colker; and, principally, works of Fulcoius of Beauvais — his Vterque, by Rousseau; the Epistulae, by Colker; the Epitaphia, by Omont; the Vita sancti Mauri, by the Bollandists; the Vita sancti Blandini, by Poncelet;′ the Vita sancti Medardi (a fragment), by Boutemy. It is true that FulcoiusVita sancti Agili is still unpublished and that his Vita sancti Earonis is represented only by excerpts published at various times, by Mabillon, Suchier, and Krusch. But Sister Mary Isaac Jogues Rousseau, S.S.N.D., will probably edit all of Fulcoius' verse lives of saints. What is left in the Beauvais manuscript are five poems attributed to an Odo Sacerdos, and even two of these have been published (as will be specified below).

Type
Miscellany
Copyright
Copyright © Fordham University Press 

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References

1 For a description of the Beauvais codex see Omont, H., ‘Épitaphes métriques en l'honneur de différents personnages du xie siècle composées par Fulcoie de Beauvais, archidiacre de Meaux,’ Mélanges Julien Havet (Paris 1895) 214218, and Sister Mary Isaac Jogues Rousseau, S.S.N.D., Fulcoii Beluacensis Vtriusque de nuptiis Christi et ecclesiae libri septem (diss. of The Catholic University of America, Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Latin Language and Literature 22; Washington, D.C. 1960) 56–64 and Pl. 1 (fol. 2r).Google Scholar

2 The Hildebertian pieces, according to Omont, Mélanges Havet, J. 216, are to be found in PL 171.1430, 1446, 1192–1194, 1396–1397, 1418–1420 (in the edition of Bourassé, based on that of Beaugendre, A. [Paris 1708]), and there is some evidence (Rousseau, Fulcoii Vtriusque libri septem 6 n. 28) that the Beauvais manuscript was used.Google Scholar

3 Rousseau, , Fulcoii Vtriusque libri septem 39–40.Google Scholar

4 Lecomte, Maurice, Fulcoie de Beauvais , archidiacre de Meaux (XIe siècle) (Provins 1897) 23.Google Scholar

5 Colker, Marvin L., ‘Fulcoii Beluacensis Epistulae, Traditio 10 (1954) 196197.Google Scholar

6 Rousseau, Fulcoii Vtriusque libri septem (cf. note 1 supra).Google Scholar

7 Colker, Traditio 10.191–273.Google Scholar

8 Omont, Mélanges Havet, J. 211–235.Google Scholar

9 Bollandiani, Hagiographi, ‘Vita sancti Mauri auctore Fulcoio,’ Catalogus codicum hagiographicorum latinorum antiquiorum saeculo XVI qui asseruantur in Bibliotheca Nationali Parisiensi I (Subsidia hagiographica 2.1; Brussels 1889) 240264.Google Scholar

10 Poncelet, A., ‘Vita sancti Blandini saeculi VII anachoretae Brigensis auctore Fulcoio Bellovacensi subdiacono Meldensi, Analecta Bollandiana 7 (1888) 151163.Google Scholar

11 Boutemy, A., ‘Essai de chronologie des poésies de Fulcoie de Beauvais,’ Annuaire de l'Institut de philologie et d'histoire Orientales de P Université Libre de Bruxelles 11 (Mélanges Henri Grégoire 3; Brussels 1951) 8384.Google Scholar

12 Cf. Rousseau, Fulcoii Vtriusque libri septem v, 21, 36.Google Scholar

13 Mabillon, Jean, Acta sanctorum ordinis sancti Benedicti 2 (Paris 1733) 572.Google Scholar

14 Suchier, H., ‘Chlothars des II. Sachsenkrieg und die Anfänge des französischen Volksepos, Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie 18 (1894) 175194.Google Scholar

15 Krusch, B., ‘Vita Faronis episcopi Meldensis,’ MGH, SS. rer. Merov. 5 (1910) 171206.Google Scholar

16 Sister Isaac Jogues informed me of her interest in undertaking this project in a letter of 19 November 1960.Google Scholar

17 The poems of Odo are mentioned in Omont, Mélanges Havet, J. 216, in Colker, Traditio 10.206, and in Rousseau, Fulcoii Vtriusque libri septem 20 n. 62, 33 n. 115. Hans Walther, Initia carminum ac versuum medii aevi posterioris Latinorum (Carmina medii aevi posterioris Latina 1; Göttingen 1959), cites for Odo's five poems only the Beauvais codex and no printed editions: cf. Walther nos. 19758, 13505, 15007, 1501, 20568.Google Scholar

18 See Rousseau, , Fulcoii Vtriusque libri septem 1, 1 n. 3, 4, 4 n. 22.Google Scholar

19 Cf. ibid. 58: ‘Up to the Revolution, Beauvais Chapter ownership can be traced satisfactorily through existing catalogues.’ And cf. esp. ibid. 57: ‘From the thirteenth century at least, the manuscript belonged to the ancient Chapter library of the Cathedral Church of Peter, St., Beauvais.’ See the evidence for the statements ibid. 57–60.Google Scholar

20 This epitaph alone forbids identifying our author with the Odo of Beauvais to whom Ratramnus of Corbie addressed his Liber de anima (ed. Lambot, C., O.S.B., Analecta medievalia Namurcensia 2; Namur-Lille 1951), for Ratramnus lived in the middle of the ninth century.Google Scholar

21 Such was the case of Guibert of Nogent, De vita sua 1.17 (ed. Bourgin, Georges in Collection de textes pour servir à l’étude et à l'enseignement de l'histoire [Paris 1907] 64), of Marbod, Liber decem capitulorum 1.1–4 (ed. Bulst, Walther in Heidelberger Ausgaben zur Geistes- und Kulturgeschichte des Abendlandes 8 [Heidelberg 1947] 5), and of Fulcoius, Epistulae 26.1–6 (ed. Colker, , Traditio 10.267) and De nuptiis 1.60–62 (ed. Rousseau, , Fulcoii Vtriusque libri septem 5∗), as well as of Peter of Blois, Epist. 76 (PL 207.234C).Google Scholar

22 The codex has been described by Abbott, T. K. in his Catalogue of the Manuscriptsu in the Library of Trinity College, Dublin (Dublin and London 1900) 25 and by Heinrich Schenkl in his Bibliotheca patrum Latinorum Britannica no. 3307 (Sb. Akad. Vienna 143 [1901] Heft 8, p. 50). Abbott wrongly assigns the codex to the 14th century and mentions only the ownership of St. Peter's and of Cranmer, and Schenkl errs in reporting the presence of ‘epistolae … Bernardi.’Google Scholar

23 Ivo: PL 151.325–327, 162.11–288; Hildebert: PL 171.135–312.Google Scholar

24 Poems by Hildebert and his school have been published in PL 171.1177–1458. Important articles bearing on the text and authenticity of the Hildebertian poems are: Haur, B.éau, Notices et extraits des manuscrits 28.2 (1887) 289448; Hammond, Mason, ‘Notes on Some Poems of Hildebert in a Harvard Manuscript,’ Speculum 7 (1932) 530–539; Wilmart, A., ‘Le florilège de Saint-Gatien,’ Revue bénédictine 48 (1936) 1–40, 147–181; Boutemy, A., ‘Le recueil poétique du ms. latin 5129 de la Bibliothèque nationale de Paris,’ Scriptorium 2 (1948) 47–55.Google Scholar

25 For this and other manuscripts as deriving from St. Peter's, Gloucester, see Ker, N. R., Medieval Libraries of Great Britain: A List of Surviving Books (London 1941) 50.Google Scholar

26 Cf. Sears Jayne and Johnson, F. R., The Lumley Library (London 1956) 80, 304. See also O'Sullivan, William, ‘Ussher as a Collector of Manuscripts,’ Hermathena 88 (1956) 38.Google Scholar

27 Abbott, , Catalogue (cit. n. 22) iii.Google Scholar

28 Ussher, James, De symbolis p. 19 (in Annales Veteris et Novi Testamenti [Geneva 1722]). On Young as librarian of the Royal Library, see Warner, G. F. and Gilson, J. P., Catalogue of Western Manuscripts in the Old Royal and King's Collections I (London 1921) xix and Jayne and Johnson, Lumley Library 18–20.Google Scholar

29 Walther, , Initia (cit. n. 17) no. 16915.Google Scholar

30 Ibid., no. 1511.Google Scholar

31 Walther, , ibid ., notes only the first of the two epitaphs on Manasses (no. 9429) and that on the Caithness bishop (no. 8367b). No edition or second manuscript is mentioned for either poem.Google Scholar

32 ‘1. Octava. Aeterna requies’ (Du Cange, Glossarium).Google Scholar

33 The line was left incomplete in the manuscript; ‘quantum’ suggests itself as a likely supplement.Google Scholar

34 Chevalier, Répertoire …: Bio-bibliogr. 2.2980. On the different Manasses who were bishops or archbishops of French sees, see Christiana, Gallia 1.548–550; 4.587–591; 7.92, 196; 9.70–75, 77–80; 12.494.Google Scholar

35 abba: cf. Marc. 14.36, Rom. 8.15, Gal. 4.6; also ‘pater’ as used of a bishop by Odo Sacerdos, supra, part I (2.9).Google Scholar

36 Schenkl, loc. cit. (cf. note 22 supra), refers to a discussion on Bishop Adam of Caithness in ‘Hardy III p. 12.’ Hardy, T. D., however, discusses this Adam in Descriptive Catalogue of Materials Relating to the History of Great Britain and Ireland to the Reign of Henry VII 3 (SS. rer. Britann. 26.3 [1871]) 63.Google Scholar

37 Angerius is not mentioned in The Chronicle of Melrose from the Cottonian Manuscript Faustina B IX in the British Museum, ed. Anderson, A. O., Anderson, M. O., and Dickinson, W. C. (London 1936); Chronicle of Holyrood, ed. Anderson, M. O. and Anderson, A. O. (Scottish Historical Society3 30 [1938]); Ioannes de Fordun, Chronica gentis Scotorum, Annales, ed. Skene, W. F. (Edinburgh 1871); Anderson, A. O., Early Sources of Scottish History A.D. 500 to 1286 (Edinburgh 1922); Dickinson, W. C. et al., A Source Book of Scottish History I (London 1952).Google Scholar

38 Angerius is not mentioned in Robert Keith, An Historical Catalogue of the Scottish Bishops Down to the Year 1688 (Edinburgh 1824); Gordon, J. F. S., Scotichronicon Comprising Bishop Keith's Catalogue of Scottish Bishops Enlarged (Glasgow 1867); James Rankin, A Handbook of the Church of Scotland (Edinburgh and London 1888); John Dowden, The Bishops of Scotland, Being Notes on the Lives of All the Bishops under Each of the Sees Prior to the Reformation, ed. Thomson, J. M. (Glasgow 1912); Macewen, A. R., A History of the Church in Scotland (London 1913); Anthony Mitchell, Biographical Studies in in Scottish Church History (Milwaukee 1914); Morgen, M., ‘The Organisation of the Scottish Church in the Twelfth Century,’ Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 4 29 (1947) 135–149; Duke, J. A., History of the Church of Scotland to the Reformation (Edinburgh and London 1937).Google Scholar

39 Angerius is not mentioned in Calder, J. T., Sketch of the Civil and Traditional History of Caithness from the Tenth Century (Glasgow 1861); Beaton, D., Ecclesiastical History of Caithness and Annals of Caithness Parishes (Wick 1909); Bentinck, C. D., ‘The Bishops and Clergy of the Ancient Diocese of Caithness,’ Transactions of the Gaelic Society of Inverness 28 (1912–1914) 237–269. This article was wrongly assigned to volume 27 (1918) by John Mowat in his New Bibliography of the County of Caithness (Wick 1940) 135. Mowat's work has otherwise been of great service, especially in its list of periodical literature on the church of Caithness (pp. 134–136); Angus Mackay, The History of the Province of Cat (Caithness and Sutherland) from the Earliest Times to the Year 1615 (Wick 1914).Google Scholar

40 Angerius is not recorded in Gams, P. B., Series episcoporum (Ratisbon 1873).Google Scholar

41 On Bishops Andrew, John, and Adam and their dates see: The Chronicle of Melrose (ed. Anderson, A. O. et al.) 45, 58, 75 (= Rer. Anglic. SS. Veterum 1 [Oxford 1684] 176, 186, 199); Chronicon de Lanercost, ed. Stevenson, Joseph (Maitland Club Publications 46; Edinburgh 1839) 2930; Ioannes de Fordun, Annales (ed. Skene, ) 276, 289; Dowden, Bishops of Scotland 232–234; Bentinck, Transactions of the Gaelic Soc. of Inverness 28.238–241; Anderson, Sources of Scottish History II 182, 308, 350, 355 n. 1, 356 n., 394, 435 n. 4, 449–452; Beaton, Ecclesiastical History of Caithness 89–96.Google Scholar

42 Keith, , Historical Catalogue of the Scottish Bishops 205; Beaton, Ecclesiastical History of Caithness 89; Dowden, Bishops of Scotland 232; Bentinck, Transactions of the Gaelic Soc. of Inverness 28.237; Dickinson et al., Source Book of Scottish History I 42.Google Scholar

43 Cf. Ps. 118.143: ‘Tribulatio et angustia inuenerunt me.’Google Scholar

44 Ps. 114.3: ‘Tribulationem et dolorem inueni.’Google Scholar

45 Cf. Ps. 54.17: ‘ad Deum clamaui’; Ion. 1.5: ‘clamauerunt ad Deum.’Google Scholar

46 Cf. Matth. 8.25: ‘Salua nos. Perimus.’Google Scholar

47 Cf. 2 Tim. 3.1: ‘In nouissimis diebus instabunt tempora periculosa.’Google Scholar

48 On ‘inualuit’ cf. 2 Par. 17.1, Osee 12.4, Act. 19.16.Google Scholar

49 Cf. Gen. 6.5: ‘quod multa malitia hominum esset in terra.’ Gen. 8.8, 2 Reg. 14.33, Iob 5.10, and elsewhere in the Bible: ‘super faciem terrae.’Google Scholar

50 Cf. Ierem. 30.7: ‘Tempusque tribulationis est Iacob.’Google Scholar

51 Cf. Matth. 24.21: ‘Erit enim tunc tribulatio magna qualis non fuit ab initio mundi usque modo.’ And cf. Marc. 13.19: ‘Erunt enim dies illi tribulationes tales quales non fuerunt ab initio creaturae … usque nunc.’ 52 imperalium MS. Google Scholar

53 occurratis pro uiribus (order corr. by the original hand) MS. Google Scholar

54 The Vigil of St. Peter's Chains is on July 31.Google Scholar

55 Cf. 1 Reg. 10.19: ‘Saluauit uos de uniuersis malis et tribulationibus’; Ps. 106.39 ‘a tribulatione malorum et dolore.’Google Scholar

56 Cf. Isai. 11.2: ‘spiritus consilii et fortitudinis.’Google Scholar

57 Cf. 1 Tim. 2.5: ‘mediator Dei et hominum, homo Christus Iesus.’Google Scholar

58 caractare MS. Google Scholar

59 gratia MS. Google Scholar

60 Cf. Ioh. 14.18: ‘Non relinquam uos orphanos.’ And cf. Matth. 28.20: ‘Ecce ego — saeculi.’Google Scholar

61 Cf. Eccli. 50.6: ‘quasi stella — nebulae.’Google Scholar

62 Cf. Matth. 8.26: ‘surgens imperauit — tranquillitas.’Google Scholar

63 Cf. Ps. 67.7 (Psalterium Romanum): ‘Deus qui habitare facit unanimes in domo’ and the Introit in the Roman Missal for the 11th Sunday after Pentecost.Google Scholar

64 Cf. Exod. 34.26, Deut. 23.18, 4 Reg. 11.4, and elsewhere in the Bible: ‘in domo Domini.’Google Scholar

65 hinc inde: hiccinde MS. Google Scholar

66 Ed. Weiland, L. in MGH Leges, sectio 4: Constitutiones et acta publica imperatorum et regum 1 (1893) 290.Google Scholar

67 Ibid. Google Scholar

68 André Wilmart, Codices Reginenses Latini 1 (Vatican City 1927) 429: ‘corpus … compositum … saec. XIII in. vel fortasse paulo prius’ (on pp. 419–430 a full description of the manuscript).Google Scholar

69 Abbott, loc. cit. (supra n. 22).Google Scholar

70 On Henry of France, see Gallia Christiana 9 (1751) 8894; Histoire littéraire de le France 13 (1814) 541–553; PL 182.680, 189.399–400, 196.1559–1566; H. Géraud, ‘Les routiera au douzième siècle,’ Bibliothèque des l'École de chartes 3 (1841–1842) 127–129; Fabriciuss, J.A. Bibliotheca latina mediae et infimae aetatis III (1858) 211; Hermann Reuter, Geschichte Alexanders des Dritten und der Kirche seiner Zeit I (Leipzig 1860) 163–164, 168, 227; II (Leipzig 1860) 98–99, 102; III (Leipzig 1864) 406; Ulysse Chevalier, Répertoire … Bio-, bibliogr. 1 (Paris 1905) 2081; Hugo Reichel, Die Ereignisse an der Saone im August und September des Jahres 1162: Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Kirchenspaltung unter Friedrich I (diss., Halle a. S. 1908) 61; Wilhelm von Giesebrecht, Geschichte der deutschen Kaiserzeit, ed. Schild, Wilhelm (Meersburg 1930) V 197–198, 219, 273–274, 276–278, 350, 384–408, 544, 553, 598–599, 618; Martin Preiss, Die politische Tätigkeit und Stellung der Cisterzienser im Schisma von 1159–1177 (Historische Studien 248; Berlin 1934) 28, 28 n. 10, 38, 41, 44, 48, 49, 51; Jean-Berthold Mahn, L'Ordre cistercien et son gouvernement des origines au milieu du XIIIe siècle 1098–1265 (2nd ed., Paris 1951) 142–147, 163; Marcel Pacaut, Alexandre III: Etude sur la conception du pouvoir pontifical dans sa pensée et dans son oeuvre (L’Église et l'état au moyen âge 11; Paris 1956) 59 n., 76, 116, 130, 140–142, 147, 166, 174, 198, 260 n. 3, 281 n. 1.Google Scholar

71 See Pacaut, , Alexandre III 59 n.Google Scholar

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77 Helmhold, Chronica Slauorum 1.90 (91) (ed. Lappenberg, J. M. and revised by Schmeidler, B., MGH, In usum scholarum [1937] 176–177). Cf. also Chronicon Clarauallense a. 1166 (PL 185.1248) and Annales Palidenses a. 1162 (ed. Pertz, G. H., MGH, SS 16.92). On Cistercian support for Alexander III, see Preiss, , Die politische Tätigkeit und Stellung esp. 44 and 52; Leclercq, J., O.S.B., ‘Le témoignage de Geoffroy d'Auxerre sur la vie cistercienne,’ Analecta monastica 2 (Studia Anselmiana 31; Rome 1953) 198200; idem, ‘Épitres d'Alexandre III sur les Cisterciens, Revue bénédictine 69 (1954) 68–70; and see Mahn, , L'Ordre cistercien 139–148, 241.Google Scholar

78 Recueil des historiens des Gaules 16.178.Google Scholar

78 PL 200.166.Google Scholar

80 Gallia Christiana 9.89, Recueil des historiens des Gaules 16.31, and PL 196.1568–1569.Google Scholar

81 Iodocus (Ioscius) was bishop of Tours from 1157 to 1173. See Gallia Christiana 14 (1856) 8992.Google Scholar

82 Hugo of Toucy was bishop of Sens from 1142 to 1168. See Gallia Christiana 12 (1770) 4750.Google Scholar

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84 Helmhold, , Chronica Slauorum 1.90 (91) (ed. Lappenberg-Schmeidler, 177–178).Google Scholar

85 Balzani in Cambridge Medieval History 5.436.Google Scholar

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87 PL 200.168. Unfortunately, Reichel's meticulous Ereignisse an der Saone I (cit. supra n. 70), intended as the first part of a larger work, only leads up to the Imperial conference.Google Scholar

88 Luchaire, , op. cit. (n. 74 supra) 437.Google Scholar

89 Pacaut, , Alexandre III (cit. supra n. 70) 59 n.: ‘il est permis d'espérer que le personnage sera un jour ou l'autre l'objet d'une étude.’Google Scholar