Isidore of Seville

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Saint Isidore of Seville (560 - April 4, 636) was Archbishop of Seville for more than three decades and has the reputation of being one of the great scholars of the early middle ages. All the later medieval history-writing of Spain was based on Isidore's histories.

Isidore was born in Cartagena, Spain, to an influential family who were instrumental in the political-religious maneuvering that converted the Visigothic kings from Arianism to Catholicism, and were all awarded sainthoods: his brother Leander immediately preceded him as Catholic bishop of Seville, the opponent of king Liuvigild, his younger brother was also awarded a bishopric at the start of the new reign of Catholic Reccared, and their sister was an abbess in charge of forty convents.

Isidore's Latin was affected by local Visigothic traditions and contains hundreds of recognizably Spanish words; his 18th-century editor Arevalo identified 1640 of them. At a time of disintegration of classical culture, and aristocratic violence and illiteracy, he assisted Leander in the conversion of the royal Visigoth Arians to Catholicism and carried the conversion forward after his brother's death, for example in presiding over the (second) synod of Seville (November 618 or 619), which the bishops of Gaul and Narbonne attended, as well as the Spanish prelates. In the Council's Acts the nature of Christ is fully set forth, countering Arian conceptions. At an advanced age he also presided over the Fourth Council of Toledo (633), which required all bishops to establish seminaries, on the pattern of the one at Seville associated with Isidore. The council probably expressed with tolerable accuracy the mind and influence of Isidore. The position and deference granted to the king is remarkable. The church is free and independent, yet bound in solemn allegiance to the acknowledged king: nothing is said of allegiance to the bishop of Rome.

Isidore's most important work was the first encyclopedia known to be compiled in western civilization, the Etymologiae. The work takes its title from the method he used in the transcription of his era's knowledge. The encyclopedia was a huge compilation of 448 chapters in 20 volumes, devoted to transmitting the epitome of the learning of antiquity. The depository of classical culture in Isidore's compendium was so highly regarded that it superseded the use of many individual works of the classics themselves, which were not recopied and have been lost. The book was the most popular compendium in medieval libraries. It was printed in at least 10 editions between 1470 and 1530, showing Isidore's continued popularity in the Renaissance. Until the 12th century brought translations from Arabic sources, Isidore transmitted what western Europeans remembered of the works of Aristotle and other Greeks, although he understood only a limited amount of Greek. The Etymologiae was much copied, particularly into medieval bestiaries.

His other works include his Chronica Majora (a universal history), De differentiis verborum, which amounts to brief theological treatise on the doctrine of the Trinity, the nature of Christ, of Paradise, angels, and men. Isidore also produced a History of the Goths; On the Nature of Things (not the poem of Lucretius), a book of astronomy and natural history dedicated to the Visigothic king Sisebut; and Questions on the Old Testament. There is a mystical treatise on the allegorical meanings of numbers, and a number of brief letters.

He was canonized as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church in 1598 and declared a Doctor of the Church in 1722.

In 2003 he was proposed as the patron saint of the Internet, but was not among the top six vote totals in an Italian language Internet poll (Google translation: [1])

Alternative spelling: Isadore.

See also: Cartographer

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