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Did Cynewulf use a martyrology? Reconsidering the sources of The Fates of the Apostles
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 September 2008
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In The Fates of the Apostles Cynewulf shows only limited interest in the details of his heroes' lives and passions. He devotes more of his poem to meditation on the meaning of those events than to the actions themselves. Even so, for the last hundred years, scholars have sought to identify the source or sources of the hagiographical information the author incorporated into his text. Cynewulf speaks of having gathered his information from far and wide (lines 1–2), but most investigators have dismissed this statement as a conventional tag, and they have tried to identify the minimum number of sources needed to provide the details that Cynewulf relates. Efforts to locate a single source have always been in vain, but early investigators generally agreed that the most important source was probably the martyrology of the Venerable Bede or a related document. Not only did this text include nearly all of the information that Cynewulf chose to convey, but its attribution to Bede seemed to assure that it would have been available to an early-ninth-century poet. In 1908, however, this consensus was shaken by the publication of Henri Quentin's path-breaking investigation of the medieval martyrological tradition. Surprisingly, although nine decades have passed since this work appeared, its full implications have yet to be integrated into Cynewulf scholarship. Now a revival of the view that Cynewulf employed a martyrology makes the assimilation of Quentin's conclusions along with the results of more recent martyrological studies imperative.
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References
1 The most recent edition of Cynewulf's text is Brooks, K. R., Andreas and The Fates of the Apostles (Oxford, 1961), pp. 56–60.Google Scholar On the topic of the poet's sources, see Sarrazin, G., ‘Die Fata Apostolorum und der Dichter Kynewulf’, Anglia 12 (1899), 375–87Google Scholar; Krapp, G. P., Andreas and The Fates of the Apostles: Tivo Anglo-Saxon Narrative Poems (Boston, 1906), pp. xxix–xxxiiGoogle Scholar; Perkins, R., ‘On the Sources of the Fata Apostolorum’, Mod. Lang. Notes 32 (1917), 159–61CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hamilton, G. L., ‘The Sources of the Fates of the Apostles and Andreas’, Mod. Lang. Notes 35 (1920), 385–95CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sisam, K., ‘Cynewulf and His Poetry’, PBA 18 (1932), 302–31Google Scholar, repr. in his Studies in the Histoiy of Old English Literature (Oxford, 1953), pp. 1–28Google Scholar; Brooks, , Andreas and The Fates of the Apostles, pp. xxx–xxxiGoogle Scholar; Calder, D. G., ‘The Fates of the Apostles, the Latin Martyrologies, and the Litany of the Saints’, MÆ 44 (1975), 219–24Google Scholar; idem, Cynewulf, Twayne's English Authors Series 327 (Boston, 1981), 27–9; Allen, M. J. B. and Calder, D. G., Sources and Analogues of OldEnglish Poetry: the Major Latin Textsin Translation (Cambridge, 1976), pp. 35–9Google Scholar; Cross, J. E., ‘Cynewulf's Traditions About the Apostles in Fates of the Apostle’, ASE 8 (1979), 163–75Google Scholar, repr. Cynewulf: Basic Readings, ed. Bjork, R. E. (New York, 1996), pp. 79–94; and P. W. Conner, ‘On Dating Cynewulf, Ibid. pp. 23–55.Google Scholar
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10 On this text, see now McCulloh, J. M., ‘The “Pseudo-Bede of Cologne”: a Martyrology of the “Gorzean” Reform’, Forschungen zur Reichs-, Papst- und Landesgeschichte: Peter Herde zum 65. Geburtstag von Freunden, Schülern und Kollegen dargebracht, ed. Borchardt, K. and Bünz, E., 2 vols. (Stuttgart, 1998) I, 81–99.Google Scholar
11 On the history of the Roman Martyrology, see Aigrain, , L'hogiographie, pp. 91–9Google Scholar; Dubois, J. and Lemaitre, J.-L., Sources et méthodes de l'hagiographie médiévale (Paris, 1993), pp. 121–3.Google Scholar Baronius's use of Herwagen's edition is clear from the references to Bede in his notes to the Roman Martyrology. (I examined the edition published at Antwerp in 1589). In McCulloh, , ‘Pseudo-Bede’, pp. 95–6, I identified thirty-four notices characteristic of the pseudo-Bedan text that the compiler did not draw from earlier standard martyrologies. Twenty-one of those saints appear in the Roman Martyrology on the same day, and in seventeen cases, Baronius mentions Bede as one of the sources for his notice: 1 Mar. Swithbertus, 26 Mar. Liutgerus; 23 Apr. Adalbertus; 21 May Valens et pueri iii; 1 Jun. Simeon, 20 Jun. Florentia, 22 Jun. Consortia; 4 Jul. Oudalricus; 28 Aug. Pelagius; 1 Sept. Verena, 8 Sept. Corbinianus, 22 Sept. Emmeramus, 28 Sept. Wenceslaus; 16 Oct. Eliphius, 19 Oct. Aquilinus, 21 Oct. virgines 11,000; 16 Dec. Ado. Moreover, the Roman Martyrology agrees with the earliest manuscripts of pseudo-Bede in commemorating Biship Eucharius of Metz on 8 Dec. In Herwagen's edition the notice for Eucharius appears on 9 Dec., and on 8 Dec. Baronius notes, ‘Agit de eodem Beda die sequenti.’Google Scholar
12 In his edition of the Fates, published in 1961, Brooks frequendy cites ‘Bede's martyrology’ in his commentary on the text, but the work in question is clearly pseudo-Bede. As a resuit, two of the references to Bede are accurate (lines 43 and 54), but the others are not (lines 17, 45, 51, 68, 70, 76 and 77).
13 See especially Perkins, ‘On the Sources’; Hamilton, ‘The Sources of the Fates and Sisam, ‘Cynewulf and His Poetry’.
14 Cross, ‘Cynewulf's Traditions’.
15 Conner, ‘On Dating Cynewulf.
16 Ibid. pp. 24–35. This thesis was challenged in another essay in the same volume: Fulk, R. D., ‘Cynewulf: Canon, Dialect, and Date’, Cynewulf, ed. Bjork, , pp. 3–21, at 16–17.Google Scholar
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26 Florus expanded the notices for James, brother of Jesus (1 May); Peter and Paul (29 Jun.); James, brother of John (25 Jul.); Matthew (21 Sept.); Simon and Thaddeus (28 Oct.); Andrew (30 Nov.); Thomas (21 Dec.); and John (27 Dec.). In the case of Peter and Paul, Dubois, and Renaud, , Édition pratique, pp. 116–17Google Scholar, attribute to Bede's second recension a long addition that is, in fact, the work of Florus; see Quentin, , Mart. hist., pp. 359–60.Google Scholar
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28 Dubois, Martyrologe d'usuard, originally identified two recensions, but he later discovered a text earlier than Usuard's ‘first recension’, which he described in ‘A la recherche de l'état primitif du martyrologe d'usuard: le manuscrit de Fécamp’, AB 95 (1977), 43–71Google Scholar; repr. with original pagination in his Martyrologes d'usuard au Martyrologe romain: articles réédités pour son soixant-dixiéme anniversaire (Abbéville, 1990).Google Scholar For a summary of the present state of research on the recensions and their dates, see Overgaauw, E. A., Martryrologes manuscrits des anciens diocèses d'utrecht et de Liège: étude sur le développement et la diffusion du Martryrologe d'usuard, 2 vols. (Hilversum, 1993) I, 30–4.Google Scholar
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63 The BC recension lists the last of the aposdes as Jude.
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70 Mombritius, B., Sanctuarium seu vitae sanctorum, 2nd ed., 2 vols. (Paris, 1910) II, 357, lines 30–3.Google Scholar On the wide distribution of this prologue, see Philippart, , Les Légendiers latins, p. 90.Google Scholar
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