Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Early Irish Rhetoric
- 1 Late Antique and Early Medieval Ireland and the Latin West
- 2 Learning in Ireland in the Sixth through the Eighth Centuries
- 3 St Patrick and the Rhetoric of Epistolography
- 4 A Rhetorical Analysis of Patrick’s Epistola ad Milites Coroticus
- 5 The Hisperica famina
- 6 Secular Learning and Native Traditions
- Conclusion and Considerations for Further Study
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - Learning in Ireland in the Sixth through the Eighth Centuries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Early Irish Rhetoric
- 1 Late Antique and Early Medieval Ireland and the Latin West
- 2 Learning in Ireland in the Sixth through the Eighth Centuries
- 3 St Patrick and the Rhetoric of Epistolography
- 4 A Rhetorical Analysis of Patrick’s Epistola ad Milites Coroticus
- 5 The Hisperica famina
- 6 Secular Learning and Native Traditions
- Conclusion and Considerations for Further Study
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In Celtic studies, scholars have debated the prevalence of secular learning in early Ireland, and stances on this matter vary widely. In 1910, Heinrich Zimmer offered up a theory for the pre-eminence of the Irish in classical learning based on the ‘direkte Handelsverbindungen’ (‘direct trading-connections’) between Ireland and Gallo-Roman Aquitaine. The wine trade with Gaul, Zimmer argued, provided the means for the exodus of throngs of scholars from western Gaul to Ireland in the period of migration. These traders brought with them late antique Christian learning, including the works of Ausonius of Bordeaux, Sulpicius Severus, and Martin of Tours.
Three years later, in a lecture given to the School of Irish Learning in September of 1912, Kuno Meyer argued that in a twelfth-century Leiden manuscript he found further evidence for late antique Gallic scholars fleeing to Ireland. Both Meyer and Zimmer believed this note to be of the sixth century and no later:
The Huns, who were infamously begotten, i.e., by demons, after they had found their way by the guidance of a hind through the Maeotic marshes, invaded the Goths, whom they terrified exceedingly by their unexpectedly awful appearance. And thanks to them, the depopulation of the entire Empire commenced, which was completed by the Huns and Vandals and Goths and Alans, owing to whose devastation all the learned men on this side of the sea fled away, and in transmarine parts, i.e., in Hiberia and wherever they betook themselves, brought a very great advance of learning to the inhabitants of those regions.
Zimmer and Meyer take ‘Hiberia’ to mean ‘Irish’ and ‘British’, and Meyer argues that in this twelfth-century account there is clear evidence of the arrival of Gallic scholars in Ireland by the fifth century. This thesis is proved, Meyer argues, in the earliest extant writings of Irish provenance, as St Patrick refers to ‘dominicati rhetorici’ (Confessio 238.23-24), those rhetoricians in comparison to whom he felt rustic and uneducated. And with Zimmer and Meyer a long debate ensued that would continue into the twenty-first century. Meyer's claims have been tempered to the extreme, but the case on classical learning in the fifth through the eighth centuries has not been closed.
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- Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022