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First Among Abbots - The Career of Abbo of Fleury (Paperback)
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First Among Abbots - The Career of Abbo of Fleury (Paperback)
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Abbo of Fleury was a prominent churchman of late tenth-century
France--abbot of a major monastery, leader in the revival of
learning in France and England, and the subject of a serious work
of hagiography. Elizabeth Dachowski's study presents a coherent
picture of this multifaceted man with an emphasis on his political
alliances and the political considerations that colored his
earliest biographical treatment. Unlike previous studies,
Dachowski's book examines the entire career of Abbo, not just his
role as abbot of Fleury. When viewed as a whole, Abbo's life
demonstrates his devotion to the cause of pressing for monastic
prerogatives in a climate of political change. Abbo's career
vividly illustrates how the early Capetian kings and the French
monastic communities began the symbiotic relationship that replaced
the earlier Carolingian models. Despite a stormy beginning, Abbo
had, by the time of his death, developed a mutually beneficial
working relationship with the Capetian kings and had used papal
prerogatives to give the abbey of Fleury a preeminent place among
reformed monasteries of northern France. Thus, the monks of Fleury
had strong incentives for portraying the early years of Abbo's
abbacy as relatively free from conflict with the monarchy. Previous
lives of Abbo have largely followed the view put forward by his
first biographer, Aimoinus of Fleury, who wrote the Vita sancti
Abbonis within a decade of Abbo's death. While Aimoinus clearly
understood Abbo's goals and the importance of his accomplishment,
he also had several other agendas, including a glossing over of
earlier and later conflicts at Fleury and validation of an even
closer (and more subservient) relationship with the Capetian
monarchs under Abbo's successor, Gaulzin of Fleury. Abbo's
achievements set the stage for the continuing prosperity and
influence of Fleury but at the expense of Fleury's independence
from the monarchy. With Abbo's death, the monastery's relationship
with the French crown grew even closer, though Fleury continued to
maintain its independence from the episcopacy.
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