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Alcuin |
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Alcuin (735–804)![]() A page from the Alcuin Bible, dated around 800, held in the British Museum. This is an outstanding example of Carolingian illumination, combining Celtic and Byzantine art, and with the lavish use of gold. Alcuin was an English writer and theologian who was one of the scholars gathering at the court of Charlemagne in the late 8th century. He became a leading educationalist, introducing Anglo-Saxon methods of learning to the Frankish world. English scholar. Born in York, he went to Rome in 780, and in 782 took up residence at Charlemagne's court in Aachen. From 796 he was abbot at St Martin's in Tours. He disseminated Anglo-Saxon scholarship. Alcuin organized education and learning in the Frankish empire and was a prominent member of Charlemagne's academy, providing a strong impulse to the Carolingian Renaissance. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| That imaginative chap Charlemagne (forward-looking Holy Roman
Emperor) stirred things up in the 9th century when Alcuin of York came
up with a system of positurae at the ends of sentences (including one of
the earliest question marks), but to be honest western systems of
punctuation were damned unsatisfactory for the next five hundred years
until one man--one fabulous Venetian printer--finally wrestled with the
issue and pinned it to the mat. Alcuin of York is presented in the early ninth century
talking in Gibbonesque terms about "the fall of the Roman
Empire. Alcuin of York is presented in the early ninth century
talking in Gibbonesque terms about "the fall of the Roman
Empire. |
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