Saturday, December 26, 2020

Cathuulfus

Srnec: Srnec moved page Cathuulfus to Cathwulf


[[File:Cathwulf.png|thumb|Cathwulf's letter starts with the large [[initial]] D]]
'''Cathwulf''' () was an [[Anglo-Saxons|Anglo-Saxon]] learned man active in [[Francia]].<ref>: "probably not an Irishman, as has sometimes been thought, but an Anglo-Saxon active on the Continent"; : "generally assumed to be Anglo-Saxon, but given the Irish leanings of his sources some have preferred to label him simply as an Insular scholar".</ref> He is known only from a letter he wrote to [[Charlemagne]] around 775.

Cathwulf's name is Anglo-Saxon and his letter shows that he received his education in the [[British Isles]]. He was probably a churchman, possibly also a courtier. Scholars are divided over whether he should be seen as a monk or a priest. By the time he wrote his letter, he was well-acquainted with recent Frankish history. It is unlikely that Cathwulf sent his letter from England, as has been suggested. His wording indicates that he regarded himself as Charlemagne's subject and "servant" (''servulus''). Reference to "my Charles" (''Carlus mi'') and a closing advocation to "read and consider carefully" (''lege et intellege diligenter'') have been taken to indicate personal closeness to the king, even to suggest for Cathwulf a prior status as the king's tutor.

Cathwulf's letter is undated. It must have been written no earlier than June 774, since it refers to Charlemagne's [[Siege of Pavia (773–74)|capture of Pavia]] in that month. Since it refers to several events going back to Charlemagne's accession in 768 and to no events later than 774, it was probably written in the immediate aftermath of the successful conquest of the [[Lombard Kingdom]] that culminated in the fall of Pavia. This places it in late 774 or early 775, after Charlemagne's adoption of the title ''[[rex Langobardorum]]'' (king of the Lombards).

Cathwulf quotes from 7th-century Irish treatise ''[[De duodecim abusivis saeculi|On the Twelve Abuses of the World]]'', which he attributes to [[Saint Patrick]], suggesting that he was reading it in a copy of the ''[[Collectio canonum Hibernensis|Hibernian Collection of Canons]]'', which also attributes it to Patrick. He was also familiar with the ideas of [[Ambrosiaster]] and the ''[[Etymologiae|Etymologies]]'' of [[Isidore of Seville]]. He was also interested in [[numerology]] and he constructed the letter around two parallel groups of eight: the eight proofs of God's favour to Charlemagne and the eight columns that support a just king's rule. The eight columns are based on one of the so-called ''[[Proverbia Grecorum|Greek Proverbs]]'', a collection of Irish origin, although the proverb of the eight columns was not part of the original.

Cathwulf's letter is preserved only in a manuscript from the [[Abbey of Saint-Denis]] (now [[Bibliothèque National de France|Paris, BNF]], lat. 2777, formerly Regius 3989). It does not appear to have circulated widely or been widely read. There is no certain evidence that it was ever available in England. [[Wulfstan II of York]] shows knowledge of the proverb of the eight columns, but he probably got it from [[Sedulius Scottus]], who wrote in Francia. [[Asser]], who knew the eight columns, provides a definition of ''[[:wikt:enchiridion|enchiridion]]'' that is similar to Cathwulf's, but this is not proof that he had read him. [[Alcuin of York]] is the only English writer who probably read Cathwulf, but only after his move to Francia. He wrote a letter to King [[Æthelred I of Northumbria]] in 793 that very closely parallels Cathwulf.

Richard Sullivan proposes that Cathwulf's letter may have influenced Charlemagne directly. Before informing the king that "there are eight columns characteristic of a just king", he worried that "you have few firm columns, I fear, on which to sustain the fortress of God." Sullivan suggests that this may have been a reference to the weakness of the upstart [[Carolingian dynasty]], which may have prompted Charlemagne to give his twin sons born in 778 names appropriated from the old [[Merovingian dynasty]], namely, [[Louis the Pious|Louis]] and Lothair.

==Editions==
*Cathwulf, "Letter to Charlemagne", ed. [[Ernst Dümmler]], ''[[Monumenta Germaniae Historica|MGH]] Epistolae'' 4 (1895):[https://ift.tt/3nSOp5I 501–505].

==Notes==


==Bibliography==
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[[Category:8th-century Latin writers]]
[[Category:Anglo-Saxon writers]]
[[Category:Writers of the Carolingian Empire]]


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