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E-raamat: Isidore of Seville and his Reception in the Early Middle Ages: Transmitting and Transforming Knowledge

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Isidore of Seville (560636) was a crucial figure in the preservation and sharing of classical and early Christian knowledge. His compilations of the works of earlier authorities formed an essential part of monastic education for centuries. Due to the vast amount of information he gathered and its wide dissemination in the Middle Ages, Pope John Paul II even named Isidore the patron saint of the internet in 1997.

This volume represents a cross-section of the various approaches scholars have taken toward Isidore’s writings. The essays explore his sources, how he selected and arranged them for posterity, and how his legacy was reflected in later generations’ work across the early medieval West. Rich in archival detail, this collection provides a wealth of interdisciplinary expertise on one of history’s greatest intellectuals.


Isidore of Seville (d. 636 CE) is a crucial figure in the preservation and propagation of Classical and Patristic learning. He put such learning to varied use in his own day, in the process ensuring that it could be made useful for future generations. Because of the depth of what he preserved and the breadth of its diffusion, Pope John Paul II proclaimed Isidore the patron saint of the internet in 1997. Yet his influence was felt throughout the Middle Ages, most acutely in early medieval Western Europe. Isidore's compilations of the works of earlier authorities provided theological, pastoral, scientific and historical resources that formed an essential part of monastic curricula for centuries.
Representing a cross-section of the different approaches that have been taken to Isidore's writings, these collected essays explore the sources on which Isidore drew, how he selected and arranged them for future use, and the different ways in which his legacy was appropriated by future generations across the early medieval West.

Arvustused

"A splendid survey of Isidores legacy in early medieval Europe. ... [ the chapters] furnish us with resourceful intellectual, cultural, and historical frameworks for thinking about Isidore, especially in terms of his usage and currency." - Eric Lacey and Simon Thomson, The Year's Work in English Studies, Volume 98, Issue 1, 2019 "This book gathers a very complete range of topics regarding Isidore in light of recent bibliography and research. It is, in short, a magnificent update for Isidorian studies of any kind." - Ana-Isabel Magallón, University of Zaragoza, Speculum 94/1 (January 2019) "Anglophone scholars whose work involves Isidore (e.g. any Anglo-Saxonist) will find this volume useful for its insights into Isidore specifically and medieval transmission of knowledge more generally; its massive bibliographies will also prove invaluable to those for whom Isidore's work forms an important, if taken for granted, component of their own specialties." - Hilary E. Fox of Wayne State University

Preface 7(4)
Paul Fouracre
1 Introduction
11(20)
Andrew Fear
Jamie Wood
2 A Family Affair: Leander, Isidore and the Legacy of Gregory the Great in Spain
31(26)
Jamie Wood
3 Variations on a Theme: Isidore and Pliny on Human and Human-Instigated Anomaly
57(18)
Mary Beagon
4 Putting the Pieces Back Together: Isidore and De Natura Rerum
75(18)
Andrew Fear
5 The Politics of History-Writing: Problematizing the Historiographical Origins of Isidore of Seville in Early Medieval Hispania
93(18)
Michael J. Kelly
6 Isidorian Texts in Seventh-Century Ireland
111(20)
Marina Smyth
7 Isidore of Seville in Anglo-Saxon England: The Synonyma as a Source of Felix's Vita S. Guthlaci
131(28)
Claudia Di Sciacca
8 Hispania et Italia: Paul the Deacon, Isidore, and the Lombards
159(18)
Christopher Heath
9 Rylands MS Latin 12: A Carolingian Example of Isidore's Reception into the Patristic Canon
177(32)
Melissa Markauskas
10 Adoption, Adaptation, & Authority: The Use of Isidore in the Opus Caroli
209(22)
Laura Carlson
Abbreviations 231(2)
Index 233
Jamie Wood is Professor of History and Education at the University of Lincoln. He has published extensively on Isidore of Sevilles historiography, bishops in Visigothic Hispania, and the social functions of violence. His current project explores political, economic, and religious connections between the Iberian Peninsula and the Byzantine world in late antiquity. Andrew Fear is Lecturer in Classics and Ancient History at the University of Manchester and author of Rome and Baetica (Oxford, 1996), The Lives of the Visigothic Fathers (Liverpool, 1997) and Orosius: Seven Books of History against the Pagans (Liverpool, 2010).