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Bibliography

Brett, Caroline, “St Kenelm, St Melor and Anglo-Breton contact from the tenth to the twelfth centuries”, Anglo-Saxon England 47 (2018): 247–273.

  • journal article
Citation details
Contributors
Article
“St Kenelm, St Melor and Anglo-Breton contact from the tenth to the twelfth centuries”
Periodical
Volume
47
Pages
247–273
Description
Description

This article discusses the similarity between two apparently unrelated hagiographical texts: Vita et Miracula Kenelmi, composed between 1045 and the 1080s and attributed to Goscelin of Saint-Bertin, and Vita Melori, composed perhaps in the 1060s–1080s but surviving only in a variety of late-medieval versions from England and France. Kenelm was venerated at Winchcombe, Gloucestershire, Melor chiefly at Lanmeur, Finistère. Both saints were reputed to be royal child martyrs, and their Vitae contain a sequence of motifs and miracles so similar that a textual relationship or common oral origin seems a reasonable hypothesis. In order to elucidate this, possible contexts for the composition of Vita Melori are considered, and evidence for the Breton contacts of Goscelin and, earlier, Winchcombe Abbey is investigated. No priority of one Vita over the other can be demonstrated, but their relationship suggests that there was more cultural contact between western Brittany and England from the mid-tenth to the twelfth centuries than emerges overtly in the written record.

Subjects and topics
Headings
Breton Latin literature Breton and Breton Latin hagiography
Sources
Texts
History, society and culture
Agents
MelorMelor
Entry reserved for but not yet available from the subject index.

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Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
October 2022