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Archbishop Sigeric's journey to Rome in 990

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 September 2008

Veronica Ortenberg
Affiliation:
St Hugh's College, Oxford

Extract

According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Archbishop Sigeric of Canterbury went to Rome in 990, to fetch his pallium. Sigeric, formerly a monk of Glastonbury and then abbot of St Augustine's, Canterbury, had been consecrated bishop of Ramsbury in 985, and became archbishop of Canterbury at the end of 989 or at the beginning of 990, on the death of Archbishop Æthelgar. During the journey, or more likely, once he had returned to England, he committed to writing a diary covering his journey and his stay in Rome. This year, the 1000th anniversary of Sigeric's visit to the ‘city of St Peter’, as medieval travellers called Rome, seems a suitable time to undertake a new examination of the considerable devotional and artistic impact of the Roman pilgrimage on the cultural and spiritual life of the late Anglo-Saxon Church.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1990

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References

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24 Needless to say, this process of influence sometimes worked the other way round, i.e. from England to the Continent, in the tenth century, as had been the case, to a much greater extent, in the eighth and the early ninth centuries.

25 The best account of Benedict Biscop's journeys to Rome is in Bede's, Historia abbatum, ptd Venerabilis Baedae Opera Historica, ed. Plummer, C., 2 vols. (Oxford, 1896) I, 364–87Google Scholar. Wilfrid's visits are described in Colgrave, B., The Life of Bishop Wilfrid by Eddius Stephanus (Cambridge, 1927), pp. 1013, 66–7 and 120–1Google Scholar. In his account of one of Biscop's journeys (Historia abbatum, p. 373), Bede states that Biscop brought back books, relics of the apostles and martyrs, the archcantor of St Peter's, a letter of privilege for his foundations, and pictures and holy images (of which a detailed account is given) to decorate Wearmouth. Bede further describes the pictures which Biscop brought back for Jarrow: ‘imagines quoque ad ornandum monasterium aecclesiamque beati Pauli apostoli de concordia veteris et novi Testamenti summa ratione conpositas exibuit; verbi gratia, Isaac ligna, quibus inmolaretur portantem, et Dominum crucem in qua pateretur aeque portantem, proxime super invicem regione, pictura coniunxit. Item serpenti in heremo a Moyse exaltato, Filium homines in cruce exaltatum conparavit.’ (‘He also displayed, for the adorning of the monastery and church of the blessed apostle Paul, paintings showing the agreement of the Old and New Testaments, most cunningly ordered: for example, a picture of Isaac carrying the wood on which he was to be slain, was joined (in the next space answerable above) to one of the Lord carrying the cross on which He likewise was to suffer. He also set together the Son of Man lifted up on the cross with the serpent lifted up by Moses in the wilderness.’ Transl. from King, J. E., Baedae Opera Historica, 2 vols. (London, 1930) II, 413–15).Google Scholar

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36 Ibid. pp. 110–11.

37 Ibid. p. 128.

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41 Magoun, , ‘Rome’, p. 276Google Scholar and Pesci, , ‘L'ltinerario’, p. 51.Google Scholar

42 It seems that the obligation for English archbishops to go to Rome to obtain the pallium became standard practice only in the later Anglo-Saxon period, whereas previously the pallium had been sent to them; see Levison, W., England and the Continent in the Eighth Century (Oxford, 1946), Appendix 3, pp. 241–8.Google Scholar

43 See Öhlmann, E., ‘Die Alpenpässe im Mittelalter’, Jahrhuch für Schweizerischc Geschichte 3 (1878), 165289Google ScholarScheffel, P.H., Verkehrungsgeschichte der Alpen, 2 vols. (Berlin, 1914)Google Scholar II, passim; and Tyler, J.E., The Alpine Passes in the Middle Ages (962–1250) (Oxford, 1930), pp. 2133.Google Scholar

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56 Tronzo, W., ‘Two Roman Wall Decorations’, Dumbarton Oaks Papers 41 (1987), 489–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar, suggests that this cycle may have been added in the later Middle Ages; his argument, based on his view that the figures drawn by Grimaldi have a ‘Gothic sway’, does not seem to me very convincing. I am grateful to Professor R. Deshman for having brought this paper to my attention.

57 On Pega's tomb, see Armellini, , Le chiese II, 921Google Scholar. His statement, however, is based on a spurious Crowland text of the later Middle Ages, the Pseudo-Ingulf; see Colgrave, B., Felix's Life of St Guthlac (Cambridge, 1956), pp. 192–3.Google Scholar

58 Armellini, , Le chiese II, 858951Google Scholar; Huelsen, , Le chiese, pp. 417–18Google Scholar; Krautheimer, , Corpus Basilicarum V, 165279Google Scholar; Kessler, H. L., ‘“Caput et Speculum Omnium Ecclesiarum”: Old St Peter's and Church Decoration in Medieval Latium’, Italian Church Decoration of the Middle Ages and Early Renaissance, ed. Tronzo, W. (Florence, 1989).Google Scholar

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60 Gasquet, F., A History of the Venerable English College, Rome (London, 1920), pp. 910.Google Scholar

61 This was one of the four monasteries within the Vatican itself.

62 ASC 874 (Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, ed. Whitelock, et al. , p. 48Google Scholar); Armellini, , Le chiese II, 951–3Google Scholar; Huelsen, , Le chiese, pp. 363–4.Google Scholar

63 Pesci, , ‘L'ltinerario’, p. 52.Google Scholar

64 Gasquet, , Venerable College, p. 18.Google Scholar

65 Magoun, , ‘Rome’, p. 272.Google Scholar

66 Pesci, , ‘L'ltinerario’, pp. 51–5.Google Scholar

67 Armellini, , Le chiese 1, 490Google Scholar: ‘Hee sunt reliquie que sunt recondite in altari maiori … craticula super qua assatus fuit’.

68 This was the name used to describe the earliest places of worship in Rome since the third century. Originally founded and supported by a wealthy Christian convert, often in his or her own house, it later came to signify the pastoral ‘living’ of a priest.

69 It was reconstructed by Morey, C. R., Lost Mosaics and Frescoes of Rome in the Medieval Period (Princeton, 1915), pp. 615.Google Scholar

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72 Hamilton, B., ‘The City of Rome and the Eastern Churches in the Tenth Century’, pp. 89Google Scholar, and ‘The Monastic Revival in Tenth-Century Rome’, pp. 3940Google Scholar, in his Monastic Reform, Catharism and the Crusades (900–1300) (London, 1979)Google Scholar; Ferrari, , Early Roman Monasteries, pp. 336–40.Google Scholar

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76 Apart from the basilica on the Via Nomentana, the other two were Sant' Agnese ad due furna and Sant' Agnese in Agone, on the alleged place of her martyrdom. Armellini, , Le chiese II, 1063–71Google Scholar; Huelsen, , Le chiese, pp. 170Google Scholar and 238–9; Krautheimer, , Corpus Basilicarum I, 1439.Google Scholar

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80 de Rossi, , Roma sotterranea I, 225–9Google Scholar. This cemetery was by then already known as ‘St Callixtus's’. The church itself was further associated with Gregory the Great, who reputedly preached his famous 37th Homily on the Gospel there.

81 Armellini, , Le chiese II, 1112–28Google Scholar; Huelsen, , Le chiese, p. 460Google Scholar; Krautheimer, , Corpus Basilicarum IV, 99147.Google Scholar

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85 The importance of St Andrew and St Luke needs underlining; the popularity of St Peter's brother in England (he was venerated second only to his brother) was originally based on the devotion to him in Rome, especially from the age of Gregory the Great onwards, who dedicated to the Apostle the monastery he had founded in his own home on Mount Caelius. St Augustine and his monks of the mission to England in 597 belonged to that community, of whom Augustine had been the prior.

86 Armellini, , Le chiese II, 1151–62Google Scholar; Huelsen, . Le chiese, pp. 415–16Google Scholar; Krautheimer, , Corpus Basilicarum V, 93164.Google Scholar

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88 Hamilton, , ‘City of Rome’, pp. 1520Google Scholar, and Orientale lumen and magistra latinitas: Greek Influences on Western Monasticism (900–1100)’, in his Monastic Reform, pp. 188–9Google Scholar and 209–11.

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101 The Good Friday procession is described in the Appendix to the Itinerary of Einsiedeln.

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108 Moore, , Saxon Pilgrims, p. 86.Google Scholar

109 See Symons, T., Regularis Concordaia Anglicae Nationis Monachorum Sanctimonialiumque: the Monastic Agreement of the Monks and Nuns of England (London, 1953), pp. 3652.Google Scholar

110 Cambridge, University Library, Ff.1.23 (?Winchcombe or Ramsey, s. ximed), 280r.

111 Aldhelm's, De Virginitate, ed. Ehwald, R., MGH, Auct. Antiq. 15, 298–9Google Scholar and 432–4; Ælfric's Lives of Saints, ed. Skeat, W. W., 2 vols., EETS 76, 82, 94 and 114 (London, 18811900) I, 170–95.Google Scholar

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114 Numerous other examples can be given for saints who appear in eleventh-century sources, such as St Praxedis or St Petronilla.

115 For the crypt at Canterbury, see Brooks, N., The Early History of the Church of Canterbury: Christ Church from 597 to 1066 (Leicester, 1984), pp. 41–2Google Scholar; for the images brought back by Biscop, see above p. 202, no. 25. and the description of the Lateran nave cycle.

116 Florence, Bibliotheca Medicea Laurenziana, Plut. XVIII. 20 (Christ Church, Canterbury, s. xi1); see Temple, E., Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts 900–1066 (London, 1976), no. 69Google Scholar and ill. 232.

117 Sant' Anastasio had a Greek community, but I emphasize its link with St Paul, which would have recommended the church to the pilgrims on that account as well.

118 Krautheimer, , Rome, pp. 109–42Google Scholar. There is also no reference to the monastery of San Gregorio Magno, founded by Gregory the Great on his house on Mount Caelius in honour of St Andrew, which one would expect English pilgrims to have wished to visit.

119 Pesci, , ‘L'ltinerario’, pp. 5860.Google Scholar

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128 Ibid. 1, 796. Repetti ascribes the first mention of pievi dependent on San Giovanni, amongst which is a pieve of SS Pietro e Paolo di Valconeghisi, to a thirteenth-century list. Thus, Sigeric's entry may be, yet again, the first piece of evidence for the existence of a church.

129 Ibid. 1, 352–3 and V, 80.

130 Ibid. 1, 146.

131 Ibid. IV, 581.

132 On Lucca, see I. Barsali, Belli, ‘La topografia di Lucca nei secoli VIII-X’, Attidel 5. Congresso Internazionale di Studi sull' Alto Medioevo (Lucca) (Spoleto, 1973), pp. 461554Google Scholar, and Perkins, B. Ward, From Classical Antiquity to the Middle Ages. Urban Public Buildings in Northern and Central Italy AD 300–850 (Oxford, 1984)Google Scholar, Appendix 2, pp. 245–9.

133 Magoun, , ‘Pilgrim-Diary’, p. 239Google Scholar; see also Osheim, D. J., An Italian Lordship: the Bishopric of Lucca in the Late Middle Ages (Berkeley, 1977), pp. 112Google Scholar; Lestocquoy, J., ‘The Tenth Century’, Etudes d'histoire urbaine. Villes et Abbayes. Arras au Moyen Age (Arras, 1966), p. 43.Google Scholar

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135 Hodoeporicon of St Willibald, in Talbot, C.H., The Anglo-Saxon Missionaries in Germany (London, 1954), pp. 157–8.Google Scholar

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137 On Luni, see Pistarino, G., Le pievi della diocesi di Luni, pt I (La Spezia, 1961), pp. 51–2Google Scholar, and Conti, P.M., Luni nell' alto medioevo (Padua, 1967).Google Scholar

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140 Flodoard, , Histoire de l' Eglise de Reims, ed. Lejeune, M. et al. , 2 vols. (Rheims, 1854) 1, 145–7Google Scholar. This saint spent some time at Rheims and took some relics of St Rémi to Berceto, where the original dedication of the abbey had been St Rémi.

141 Magoun, , ‘Pilgrim-Diary’, p. 241.Google Scholar

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163 Wilmart, A., ‘La légende de Ste Edith en prose et en vers par le moine Goscelin’, AB 56 (1938), 5101Google Scholar and 265–307, at 50.

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166 Memorials, ed. Stubbs, , p. 395Google Scholar n. 73, provided three alternative interpretations: St Martin on the Amignon, Mont St Martin near Cambrai, and Martinpuich near Bapaumes. The first of these would be the most likely of the three because this place is on the way to Doingt, the next stop.

167 HE III. 19 (Bede's Ecclesiastical History, ed. Colgrave, and Mynors, , pp. 268–77Google Scholar); for the relic, see Eadmer, , ‘De Reliquiis Sancti Audoeni et Quorundam Aliorum Sanctorum quae Cantuariae Aecclesiae Domini Salvatoris Habentur’, ed. Wilmart, A.,Revue des Sciences Religieuses 15 (1935), 362–70Google Scholar, at 365.

168 On Arras, see Lestocquoy, , Etudes, pp. 85–6Google Scholar, 92 and 127–35.

169 Ibid. pp. 383–4. There are other manuscripts from St Vaast which may have reached England before the Conquest, for example, Cambridge, Trinity College R. 15. 14, an antiphonary written there at the end of the tenth century (Keynes, Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts, no. 12). After the Conquest, the connection was still active, if somewhat dramatically, when Abbot Seiwold of Bath fled there, taking his library with him, which he then bequeathed to St Vaast; see Grierson, P., ‘Les livres de l'abbé Seiwold de Bath’, RB 52 (1940), 96116Google Scholar, and Lapidge, M., ‘Surviving Booklists from Anglo-Saxon England’, Literature and Learning in Anglo-Saxon England: Studies presented to Peter Clemoeson the Occasion of his Sixty-Fifth Birthday, ed. Lapidge, M. and Gneuss, H. (Cambridge, 1985), pp. 3389Google Scholar, at 58–62.

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