- Credits: 3
- SSD: M-STO/01
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
- Corso: Second cycle degree programme (LS) in Modern European Literatures and Philology (cod. 0648)
Learning outcomes
To achieve advanced knowledge of a specific aspect of the history
of early medieval England, also making use of written and
archaeological sources.
Course contents
The Origins of English Christianity
The course will examine the origins and the first developments of
Christianity in England, paying special attention to the mission
sent by Gregory the Great in 596 and led by a monk named Augustine,
who later became the first bishop of Canterbury. The mission and
the conversion of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms will be studied through
the evidence provided by Bede's Historia ecclesiastica and
Gregory's correspondence. As well as the impact of the Roman
mission, the course will take into account the origins of the cult
of Gregory the Great in England through the analysis of the
earliest Life of the pope, which was composed by an anonymous monk
or nun at Whitby in c.700.
Readings/Bibliography
Two dossiers of primary sources can be obtained from the
Library of the Dipartimento di Paleografia e Medievistica, in
Piazza S. Giovanni in Monte, 2.
Secondary sources:
H. Mayr-Harting, The Coming of Christianity to Anglo-Saxon
England (third edition, 1991), pp. 40- 77
St Augustine and the Conversion of England, a cura di R.
Gameson (Stroud, 1999), pp. 1-67, 107-201
H. Chadwick, Gregroy the Great and the Mission to the
Anglo-Saxons, in Gregorio Magno e il suo tempo, XIX
Incontro di studiosi dell'antichità cristiana in collaborazione con
l'Ecole Francaise de Rome (Roma, 1991), pp. 199-212
I. Wood, The Mission of Augustine of Canterbury to the
English, Speculum 69 (1994), pp. 1-17
[Photocopies of the last two articles can also be obtained from the
above-mentioned Library]
The students who do not attend the course MUST get in touch with
the lecturer about their reading list.
Teaching methods
Seminars
Assessment methods
Final oral test
Teaching tools
Students are encouraged to consult The Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo-Saxon England, edited by M. Lapidge et al. (Oxford, 1999 and later reprints).