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Wulfstan the Cantor

Wulfstan the Cantor (c. 960 – early 11th century), also known as Wulfstan of Winchester, was an Anglo-Saxon monk of the Old Minster, Winchester. He was also a writer, musician, composer and scribe. Wulfstan is most famous for his hagiographic work Vita S. Aethelwoldi.

Life edit

Very little is known about Wulfstan's life. The date of his birth is unknown, but personal references within his poem Narratio metrica de S. Swithuno suggest he was a child at the time of St. Swithun’s canonization in 971. These references have led scholars to believe that Wulfstan was born in about 960 and was given as a child to the Old Minster, where he spent his mature life.[1] At the Old Minster, Wulfstan studied under Æthelwold of Winchester, about whom he wrote write his Vita S. Aethelwoldi. Wulfstan became a monk and a priest; he then rose to become a precentor, and hence is often referred to in contemporary sources as Wulfstan Cantor. As precentor, Wulfstan would have been responsible for leading chants, recruiting and training the choir, and composing poems and hymns, among other things.[2] In addition to these musical responsibilities, Wulfstan worked as a scribe and as a hagiographic author. The day of his death, 22 July, is recorded in a New Minster calendar, but not the year. His latest datable writing is his Vita S. Aethelwoldi, which was composed no earlier than 996. He presumably died some time in the early 11th century.[3]

Writings edit

Vita S. Aethelwoldi edit

Wulfstan's most famous work, Vita S. Aethelwoldi (The Life of St. Aethelwold), tells of the life and miracles of St. Aethelwold, Bishop of Winchester. The work is 46 chapters long, elaborately composed using complex sentences and displays a familiarity with many earlier hagiographic writings. The Vita was written very soon after Aethelwold was canonized, which took place on 10 September 996. Some scholars believe the Vita was written to coincide with this event.[4]

The work contains no statement of authorship, but is undoubtedly the writing of Wulfstan. Not only do later sources such as William of Malmesbury attribute the work to Wulfstan, the piece bears striking stylistic similarities to Wulfstan's other writings. For example, in Wulfstan's poem Narratio metrica de S. Swithuno, several phrases and even large sections of text, including two entire chapters from Vita S. Aethelwoldi, appear.[5]

The Vita was written for the purpose of recording the miraculous powers of St. Aethelwold in order to prove that Aethelwold was a vessel of divinity who could be appealed to through prayer as an intermediary to God. Wulfstan's Vita follows a format similar to other hagiographic works of the time. The piece appears to have been largely inspired by Lantfred of Winchester's Translatio et miracula S. Swithuni, which was completed in about 975. Wulfstan's work uses a similar style of prose to that of Bede’s Vita S. Cuthberti, which, like the Vita S. Aethelwoldi, contains 46 chapters. Some events described in Wulfstan’s Vita are very similar to events described in Sulpicius SeverusVita S. Martini. It is likely Wulfstan drew heavily on these authors in constructing his Vita.[6]

Narratio metrica de S. Swithuno edit

Wulfstan's poem Narratio metrica de S. Swithuno is a hexametrical version of Lantfred of Winchester's Translatio et miracula S. Swwithuni (c.975). Wulfstan's poem was composed between 992 and 994, but was put into its final form after the composition of Vita S. Aethelwoldi in 996, when two chapters of Wulfstan's prose from the Vita were turned into verse and incorporated into the poem.[4] The poem consists of 3386 lines, making it the longest Anglo-Latin poem surviving today. It is also the most accomplished Anglo-Latin poem in terms of metrical style, illustrating Wulfstan's skill as a poet.[7] The poem describes the elevation of St. Swithun and is also thought to be the original source of the well-known British weather lore that if it rains on St. Swithun's Day, 15 July, it will rain for the next 40 days.[7]

Breuiloquium de omnibus sanctis edit

Breuiloquium de omnibus sanctis is a recently discovered poem by Wulfstan. The poem bears Wulfstan's name and is thus very significant to scholars as it provides a firm basis for the analysis of Wulfstan's poetic style and technique, allowing it to be used as a template for the attribution of other works to Wulfstan. The poem is long, consisting of 669 hexameters preceded by a prologue of 20 lines of epanaleptic couplets and ending with an epilogue of 27 hexameters.[8] Breuiloquium de omnibus sanctis is a metrical version of an anonymous Carolingian sermon on All Saints called Legimus in ecclesiasticis historiis. The sermon was very popular in Wulfstan's time and was widely circulated. Wulfstan's poem begins by describing Pope Boniface IV’s explanation of the Pantheon in Rome, and then goes on to list various categories of saints venerated by the Church and commemorated on All Saints' Day.[9]

De tonorum harmonia edit

De tonorum harmonia, also known as Breuiloquium super musica, is a lost work by Wulfstan. Little is known about the piece, but the majority of information comes from a 15th-century anonymous commentary entitled De musica. The author of De musica makes four references to the work of a figure named ‘Wulstan’, which is likely Wulfstan. The references reveal that De tonorum harmonia, or Breuiloquium super musica as it is sometimes called, was concerned with the theory rather than the practice of music. Wulfstan is cited as an authority on musical theory. Although now lost, Wulfstan's De tonorum harmonia is of unique value in that it is the only known work on music composed by an Anglo-Saxon.[10]

Other works edit

Wulfstan is known to have written liturgical materials relating to the Cult of St. Aethelwold. Wulfstan was active in promoting the Cult of St. Aethelwold and as precentor would have been responsible for providing various prayers, tropes, and hymns needed for the cult's celebrations. He is also thought to have composed various hexametrical rubrics, tropes and sequences within the musical manuscripts the “Winchester Tropers”. Many of these works attributed to Wulfstan bear no explicit indication of authorship and attribution depends mainly on stylistic arguments.[11]

Legacy edit

Understanding of St. Aethelwold edit

Wulfstan's Vita S. Aethelwoldi is the principal source for knowledge of St. Aethelwold, who was one of the champions of the Monastic Reform movement in Winchester. Though other works about St. Aethelwold exist, Wulfstan's is the longest and contains the largest amount of information.

As is very clear from the Vita S. Aethelwoldi, Wulfstan was the primary figure in effecting the canonization of St. Aethelwold and was also instrumental in establishing and promoting the Cult of St. Aethelwold. The promotion of the cult was dependent on the publication of a suitable Vita text to display Aethelwold's sanctity and miraculous powers, as well as the composition of the necessary hymns and prayers for the liturgical commemoration of the saint on his feast-day. As precentor, Wulfstan fulfilled these duties and solidified Aethelwold's position as an honoured Anglo-Saxon saint.[12]

Influence on later writing edit

Many of Wulfstan's writings enjoyed wide circulation throughout Medieval England, especially his Vita S. Aethelwoldi, which had an influence on later hagiographic writing. In fact, scholars believed that Wulfstan's Vita was one of the most widely read of all pre-Conquest Anglo-Latin saints' lives.[13]

Wulfstan's Vita is thought to have inspired Aelfric of Eynsham's Vita S. Aethelwoldi, although scholars debate which text was written first. The similarities between the two texts indicate that one author was drawing on the other's text, but there is debate as to whether Aelfric is summarizing Wulfstan or Wulfstan is expanding on Aelfric. Aelfric's version has 29 chapters and can be precisely dated to the year 1006. Aelfric is well known for abridging the texts of other authors, which again leads recent scholars to believe Aelfric's Vita S. Aethelwoldi is a summary of Wulfstan's. Regardless of whose Vita was composed first, Aelfric's Vita was not as widely circulated as Wulfstan's, and therefore, the vast majority of subsequent writing about Aethelwold is based on Wulfstan's version.[14]

In addition to Aelfric, many other hagiographic writers drew on Wulfstan's Vita S. Aethelwoldi in composing their own works. The work of Goscelin of Saint-Bertin, a professional hagiographer writing at the end of the 11th century, contains miracle stories that are very similar to, and appear to be inspired by, those contained in Wulfstan's Vita. Orderic Vitalis (1075–1142) authored a reworking of Aethelwold's life based on Wulfstan. In the 12th century, the author of the Libellus Aethelwoldi or The Book of Aethelwold drew on the information contained in Wulfstan's Vita, as did the anonymous author of Chronicon monasterii de Abingdon. The Peterborough Chronicle of Huge Candidus incorporates several chapters of Wulfstan's Vita. Even as late as the 15th century works such as the poem The South English Legendary, which contains a “Life of Adelwold”, utilized Wulfstan's work. Wulfstan's Narratio metrica de S. Swithuno, De tonorum harmonia, and many of the hymns attributed to him, were also widely read and referenced by other writers in southern England, although not to the extent of his Vita.[15]

Notes edit

  1. ^ John 1994, p. 575.
  2. ^ Lapidge & Winterbottom (1991), p. 13
  3. ^ Lapidge & Winterbottom (1991), p. 14
  4. ^ a b Winterbottom (1972), p. 3
  5. ^ Lapidge & Winterbottom (1991), pp. 15–16
  6. ^ Lapidge & Winterbottom (1991), pp. 104–5
  7. ^ a b York 1994, p. 1244.
  8. ^ Lapidge & Winterbottom (1991), p. 17
  9. ^ Lapidge & Winterbottom (1991), p. 18
  10. ^ Lapidge & Winterbottom (1991), p. 16
  11. ^ See Lapidge, “The Cult of St. Swithun,” pp. 246–8 for brief account of writings attributable to Wulfstan
  12. ^ Lapidge & Winterbottom (1991), p. 99
  13. ^ Lapidge & Winterbottom (1991), p. 167
  14. ^ See Fisher, p. 381-9, Gneuss, pp. 479–80, and Robinson, pp. 107–8 for argument that Aelfric wrote first. See Winterbottom, “Three lives of Saint Ethelwold”, introduction, and Lapidge, and Winterbottom, pp. 146-–155 for argument that Wulfstan wrote first.
  15. ^ See Lapidge and Winterbottom, pp. 155–167 for list of authors thought to have utilized Wulfstan’s text. See Speed, pp. 295–301 for closer examination of the use of Wulfstan’s Vita in the South English Legendary.

Bibliography edit

  • Lapidge, M.; Winterbottom, M. (1991), Wulfstan of Winchester: The Life of St. Aethelwold (Latin and English), Clarendon Press
  • John, Eric (1994). "Wulfstan of Winchester's The Life of St. Aethelwold". Catholic Historical Review. 80 (3): 575–584.
  • Winterbottom, Michael (1972), Three Lives of English Saints (Latin only), Hunter Rose Company
  • York, Barbara (1994). "Wulfstan of Winchester". English Historical Review. 109 (434): 1244–1245.

Further reading edit

  • Fisher, D.J.V. “The Early Biographers of St. Ethelwold.” English Historical Review 67, 1952): 381-91.
  • Gneuss, H. “The Life of St. Aethelwold.” Notes &Queries 20, (1973): 479-80.
  • Lapidge, Michael. The Cult of St. Swithun. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003.
  • Lapidge, Michael. “Poeticism in Pre-Conquest Anglo-Latin Prose.” Proceedings of the British Academy 129, (2005): 321-337.
  • Lapidge, M. and M. Winterbottom. Wulfstan of Winchester: The Life of St. Aethelwold. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991.
  • McIntosh, Angus. “Wulfstan’s Prose.” In British Academic Papers on Anglo-Saxon England, selected and introduced by E.G. Stanley, 111-144. New York: Oxford University Press, 1990.
  • Robinson, J.A. The Times of St. Dunstan. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1923, 104-22.
  • Speed, Diane. “Text and Meaning in the South English Legendary Lives of Aethelwold.” Notes &Queries 41, (1994): 295-301
  • Winterbottom, Michael. “Three Lives of Saint Ethelwold.” Medium Aevum 41, no. 3 (1972): 191-201.

wulfstan, cantor, other, uses, wulfstan, disambiguation, early, 11th, century, also, known, wulfstan, winchester, anglo, saxon, monk, minster, winchester, also, writer, musician, composer, scribe, wulfstan, most, famous, hagiographic, work, vita, aethelwoldi, . For other uses see Wulfstan disambiguation Wulfstan the Cantor c 960 early 11th century also known as Wulfstan of Winchester was an Anglo Saxon monk of the Old Minster Winchester He was also a writer musician composer and scribe Wulfstan is most famous for his hagiographic work Vita S Aethelwoldi Contents 1 Life 2 Writings 2 1 Vita S Aethelwoldi 2 2 Narratio metrica de S Swithuno 2 3 Breuiloquium de omnibus sanctis 2 4 De tonorum harmonia 2 5 Other works 3 Legacy 3 1 Understanding of St Aethelwold 3 2 Influence on later writing 4 Notes 5 Bibliography 6 Further readingLife editVery little is known about Wulfstan s life The date of his birth is unknown but personal references within his poem Narratio metrica de S Swithuno suggest he was a child at the time of St Swithun s canonization in 971 These references have led scholars to believe that Wulfstan was born in about 960 and was given as a child to the Old Minster where he spent his mature life 1 At the Old Minster Wulfstan studied under AEthelwold of Winchester about whom he wrote write his Vita S Aethelwoldi Wulfstan became a monk and a priest he then rose to become a precentor and hence is often referred to in contemporary sources as Wulfstan Cantor As precentor Wulfstan would have been responsible for leading chants recruiting and training the choir and composing poems and hymns among other things 2 In addition to these musical responsibilities Wulfstan worked as a scribe and as a hagiographic author The day of his death 22 July is recorded in a New Minster calendar but not the year His latest datable writing is his Vita S Aethelwoldi which was composed no earlier than 996 He presumably died some time in the early 11th century 3 Writings editVita S Aethelwoldi edit Wulfstan s most famous work Vita S Aethelwoldi The Life of St Aethelwold tells of the life and miracles of St Aethelwold Bishop of Winchester The work is 46 chapters long elaborately composed using complex sentences and displays a familiarity with many earlier hagiographic writings The Vita was written very soon after Aethelwold was canonized which took place on 10 September 996 Some scholars believe the Vita was written to coincide with this event 4 The work contains no statement of authorship but is undoubtedly the writing of Wulfstan Not only do later sources such as William of Malmesbury attribute the work to Wulfstan the piece bears striking stylistic similarities to Wulfstan s other writings For example in Wulfstan s poem Narratio metrica de S Swithuno several phrases and even large sections of text including two entire chapters from Vita S Aethelwoldi appear 5 The Vita was written for the purpose of recording the miraculous powers of St Aethelwold in order to prove that Aethelwold was a vessel of divinity who could be appealed to through prayer as an intermediary to God Wulfstan s Vita follows a format similar to other hagiographic works of the time The piece appears to have been largely inspired by Lantfred of Winchester s Translatio et miracula S Swithuni which was completed in about 975 Wulfstan s work uses a similar style of prose to that of Bede s Vita S Cuthberti which like the Vita S Aethelwoldi contains 46 chapters Some events described in Wulfstan s Vita are very similar to events described in Sulpicius Severus Vita S Martini It is likely Wulfstan drew heavily on these authors in constructing his Vita 6 Narratio metrica de S Swithuno edit Wulfstan s poem Narratio metrica de S Swithuno is a hexametrical version of Lantfred of Winchester s Translatio et miracula S Swwithuni c 975 Wulfstan s poem was composed between 992 and 994 but was put into its final form after the composition of Vita S Aethelwoldi in 996 when two chapters of Wulfstan s prose from the Vita were turned into verse and incorporated into the poem 4 The poem consists of 3386 lines making it the longest Anglo Latin poem surviving today It is also the most accomplished Anglo Latin poem in terms of metrical style illustrating Wulfstan s skill as a poet 7 The poem describes the elevation of St Swithun and is also thought to be the original source of the well known British weather lore that if it rains on St Swithun s Day 15 July it will rain for the next 40 days 7 Breuiloquium de omnibus sanctis edit Breuiloquium de omnibus sanctis is a recently discovered poem by Wulfstan The poem bears Wulfstan s name and is thus very significant to scholars as it provides a firm basis for the analysis of Wulfstan s poetic style and technique allowing it to be used as a template for the attribution of other works to Wulfstan The poem is long consisting of 669 hexameters preceded by a prologue of 20 lines of epanaleptic couplets and ending with an epilogue of 27 hexameters 8 Breuiloquium de omnibus sanctis is a metrical version of an anonymous Carolingian sermon on All Saints called Legimus in ecclesiasticis historiis The sermon was very popular in Wulfstan s time and was widely circulated Wulfstan s poem begins by describing Pope Boniface IV s explanation of the Pantheon in Rome and then goes on to list various categories of saints venerated by the Church and commemorated on All Saints Day 9 De tonorum harmonia edit De tonorum harmonia also known as Breuiloquium super musica is a lost work by Wulfstan Little is known about the piece but the majority of information comes from a 15th century anonymous commentary entitled De musica The author of De musica makes four references to the work of a figure named Wulstan which is likely Wulfstan The references reveal that De tonorum harmonia or Breuiloquium super musica as it is sometimes called was concerned with the theory rather than the practice of music Wulfstan is cited as an authority on musical theory Although now lost Wulfstan s De tonorum harmonia is of unique value in that it is the only known work on music composed by an Anglo Saxon 10 Other works edit Wulfstan is known to have written liturgical materials relating to the Cult of St Aethelwold Wulfstan was active in promoting the Cult of St Aethelwold and as precentor would have been responsible for providing various prayers tropes and hymns needed for the cult s celebrations He is also thought to have composed various hexametrical rubrics tropes and sequences within the musical manuscripts the Winchester Tropers Many of these works attributed to Wulfstan bear no explicit indication of authorship and attribution depends mainly on stylistic arguments 11 Legacy editUnderstanding of St Aethelwold edit Wulfstan s Vita S Aethelwoldi is the principal source for knowledge of St Aethelwold who was one of the champions of the Monastic Reform movement in Winchester Though other works about St Aethelwold exist Wulfstan s is the longest and contains the largest amount of information As is very clear from the Vita S Aethelwoldi Wulfstan was the primary figure in effecting the canonization of St Aethelwold and was also instrumental in establishing and promoting the Cult of St Aethelwold The promotion of the cult was dependent on the publication of a suitable Vita text to display Aethelwold s sanctity and miraculous powers as well as the composition of the necessary hymns and prayers for the liturgical commemoration of the saint on his feast day As precentor Wulfstan fulfilled these duties and solidified Aethelwold s position as an honoured Anglo Saxon saint 12 Influence on later writing edit Many of Wulfstan s writings enjoyed wide circulation throughout Medieval England especially his Vita S Aethelwoldi which had an influence on later hagiographic writing In fact scholars believed that Wulfstan s Vita was one of the most widely read of all pre Conquest Anglo Latin saints lives 13 Wulfstan s Vita is thought to have inspired Aelfric of Eynsham s Vita S Aethelwoldi although scholars debate which text was written first The similarities between the two texts indicate that one author was drawing on the other s text but there is debate as to whether Aelfric is summarizing Wulfstan or Wulfstan is expanding on Aelfric Aelfric s version has 29 chapters and can be precisely dated to the year 1006 Aelfric is well known for abridging the texts of other authors which again leads recent scholars to believe Aelfric s Vita S Aethelwoldi is a summary of Wulfstan s Regardless of whose Vita was composed first Aelfric s Vita was not as widely circulated as Wulfstan s and therefore the vast majority of subsequent writing about Aethelwold is based on Wulfstan s version 14 In addition to Aelfric many other hagiographic writers drew on Wulfstan s Vita S Aethelwoldi in composing their own works The work of Goscelin of Saint Bertin a professional hagiographer writing at the end of the 11th century contains miracle stories that are very similar to and appear to be inspired by those contained in Wulfstan s Vita Orderic Vitalis 1075 1142 authored a reworking of Aethelwold s life based on Wulfstan In the 12th century the author of the Libellus Aethelwoldi or The Book of Aethelwold drew on the information contained in Wulfstan s Vita as did the anonymous author of Chronicon monasterii de Abingdon The Peterborough Chronicle of Huge Candidus incorporates several chapters of Wulfstan s Vita Even as late as the 15th century works such as the poem The South English Legendary which contains a Life of Adelwold utilized Wulfstan s work Wulfstan s Narratio metrica de S Swithuno De tonorum harmonia and many of the hymns attributed to him were also widely read and referenced by other writers in southern England although not to the extent of his Vita 15 Notes edit John 1994 p 575 Lapidge amp Winterbottom 1991 p 13 Lapidge amp Winterbottom 1991 p 14 a b Winterbottom 1972 p 3 Lapidge amp Winterbottom 1991 pp 15 16 Lapidge amp Winterbottom 1991 pp 104 5 a b York 1994 p 1244 Lapidge amp Winterbottom 1991 p 17 Lapidge amp Winterbottom 1991 p 18 Lapidge amp Winterbottom 1991 p 16 See Lapidge The Cult of St Swithun pp 246 8 for brief account of writings attributable to Wulfstan Lapidge amp Winterbottom 1991 p 99 Lapidge amp Winterbottom 1991 p 167 See Fisher p 381 9 Gneuss pp 479 80 and Robinson pp 107 8 for argument that Aelfric wrote first See Winterbottom Three lives of Saint Ethelwold introduction and Lapidge and Winterbottom pp 146 155 for argument that Wulfstan wrote first See Lapidge and Winterbottom pp 155 167 for list of authors thought to have utilized Wulfstan s text See Speed pp 295 301 for closer examination of the use of Wulfstan s Vita in the South English Legendary Bibliography editLapidge M Winterbottom M 1991 Wulfstan of Winchester The Life of St Aethelwold Latin and English Clarendon Press John Eric 1994 Wulfstan of Winchester s The Life of St Aethelwold Catholic Historical Review 80 3 575 584 Winterbottom Michael 1972 Three Lives of English Saints Latin only Hunter Rose Company York Barbara 1994 Wulfstan of Winchester English Historical Review 109 434 1244 1245 Further reading editFisher D J V The Early Biographers of St Ethelwold English Historical Review 67 1952 381 91 Gneuss H The Life of St Aethelwold Notes amp Queries 20 1973 479 80 Lapidge Michael The Cult of St Swithun New York Oxford University Press 2003 Lapidge Michael Poeticism in Pre Conquest Anglo Latin Prose Proceedings of the British Academy 129 2005 321 337 Lapidge M and M Winterbottom Wulfstan of Winchester The Life of St Aethelwold Oxford Clarendon Press 1991 McIntosh Angus Wulfstan s Prose In British Academic Papers on Anglo Saxon England selected and introduced by E G Stanley 111 144 New York Oxford University Press 1990 Robinson J A The Times of St Dunstan Oxford Oxford University Press 1923 104 22 Speed Diane Text and Meaning in the South English Legendary Lives of Aethelwold Notes amp Queries 41 1994 295 301 Winterbottom Michael Three Lives of Saint Ethelwold Medium Aevum 41 no 3 1972 191 201 Portals nbsp Classical music nbsp Biography nbsp Music nbsp Anglo Saxon England nbsp Middle Ages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wulfstan the Cantor amp oldid 1181106534, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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