Ursinus the Abbot explained

Ursinus the Abbot (seventh century) was an abbot of Saint-Martin at Ligugé, and presumed biographer of Saint Leodegar. He began his career as a monk in the monastery of Saint-Maixent at Poitiers in Neustria.

Ursinus later became the abbot of the monastery of Saint-Martin, where he spent the rest of his days. During his tenure he built a basilica, which became a place of honor to such a degree that in 782 it received the relics of sainted Leodegar. Ursinus also commissioned the monk Defensor to compile the florilegium Liber scintillarum from the patristic writings in the abbey's collection.[1]

An Ursinus wrote the Vita sancti Leodegarii.[2] Later authors tell this story: In 684, bishop Ansoald of Poitiers requested of the new abbot Andulf (684–96) that his monks provide him with a beatific Life of Bishop Leodegar of Autun, martyred three years prior at Sarcing in Artois; and Andulf delegated this task to Ursinus. This Life (or Passion) does not survive, but historian Bruno Krusch claimed to have reconstructed it as the basis of several versions from the Carolingian era. Historian Paul Fouracre initially questioned this account,[3] but by 1996 he had accepted it.[4]

Ursinus's tombstone, in the Latin language, reads:

Sources

Notes and References

  1. http://syrcom.cua.edu/Hugoye/Vol2No1/HV2N1Ganz.html Ganz, Knowledge of Ephraim's Writings in the Merovingian and Carolingian Age
  2. Jacques-Paul Migne, Patrologia Latina, v. xcvi
  3. "Merovingian History and Merovingian Hagiography", Past and Present, No. 127 May, 1990, pp. 3-38
  4. Late Merovingian France. History and Hagiography 640-720 Manchester, 1996