E05753: Venantius Fortunatus, in a poem to Gregory (bishop of Tours 573-594), tells how he, Fortunatus, was summoned by Gregory to the feast of *Martin (ascetic and bishop of Tours, ob. 397, S00050) in Tours (north-west Gaul), but was too ill to attend. Poem 8.11, written in Latin in Gaul, 576/c. 591.
online resource
posted on 2018-06-16, 00:00authored bykwojtalik
Venantius Fortunatus, Poems 8.11 (Ad Gregorium episcopum pro infirmitate sua, 'To bishop Gregory, on his own sickness'), 1-4
Venit ad aegrotum medici vox alma Gregori urbe ex Toronica, dum cubo rure toro, concite presbytero recitante Leone sereno, irem ut Martini sunt ubi festa pii.
'The kindly message of Gregory the physician came to me when sick from the city of Tours, as I lay on my bed in the country, urgently delivered by the serene priest Leo, to go to where the feast of Martin was being celebrated.'
Then Venantius Fortunatus describes his sickness and high fever. (The poem is clearly an explanation of why he did not respond to the summons.)
Text: Leo 1881, 196. Translation: Roberts 2017, 537.
History
Evidence ID
E05753
Saint Name
Martin, ascetic and bishop of Tours, ob. 397 : S00050
Venantius Fortunatus was born in northern Italy, near Treviso, and educated at Ravenna. In the early 560s he crossed the Alps into Merovingian Gaul, where he spent the rest of his life, making his living primarily through writing Latin poetry for the aristocracy of northern Gaul, both secular and ecclesiastical. His first datable commission in Gaul is a poem to celebrate the wedding in 566 of the Austrasian royal couple, Sigibert and Brunhild. His principal patrons were Radegund and Agnes, the royal founder and the first abbess of the monastery of the Holy Cross at Poitiers, as well as Gregory, the historian and bishop of Tours, Leontius, bishop of Bordeaux, and Felix, bishop of Nantes, but he also wrote poems for several kings and for many other members of the aristocracy. In addition to occasional poems for his patrons, Fortunatus wrote a four-book epic poem about Martin of Tours, and several works of prose and verse hagiography. The latter part of his life was spent in Poitiers, and in the 590s he became bishop of the city; he is presumed to have died early in the 7th century. For Fortunatus' life, see Brennan 1985; George 1992, 18-34; Reydellet 1994-2004, vol. 1, vii-xxviii; PCBE 4, 'Fortunatus', 801-822.
The eleven books of Poems (Carmina) by Fortunatus were almost certainly collected and published at three different times: Books 1 to 7, which are dedicated to Gregory of Tours, in 576; Books 8 and 9 after 584, probably in 590/591; and Books 10-11 only after their author's death. A further group of poems, outside the structure of the books, and known from only one manuscript, has been published in modern editions as an Appendix to the eleven books. For further discussion, see Reydellet 1994-2004, vol. 1, lxviii-lxxi; George 1992, 208-211.
Almost all of Fortunatus' poems are in elegiac couplets: one hexameter line followed by one pentameter line.
For the cult of saints, Fortunatus' poems are primarily interesting for the evidence they provide of the saints venerated in northern Gaul, since many were written to celebrate the completion of new churches and oratories, and some to celebrate collections of relics. For an overview of his treatment of the cult of saints, see Roberts 2009, 165-243.
Discussion
The poem is dedicated to Gregory, the historian and bishop of Tours. It must certainly have been written before his death in 594, but probably a few years earlier, since it appears in Book 8 of Fortunatus' Poems, the compilation of which is generally dated to c. 591. On Fortunatus' poems to Gregory of Tours, see George 1992, 124-131; Roberts 2009, 269-283; Roberts 2015.
Bibliography
Editions and translations:
Leo, F., Venanti Honori Clementiani Fortunati presbyteri Italici opera poetica (Monumenta Germaniae Historica, Auctores Antiquissimi 4.1; Berlin: Apud Weidmannos, 1881).
Roberts, M., Poems: Venantius Fortunatus (Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library 46; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2017).
George, J., Venantius Fortunatus, Personal and Political Poems (Translated Texts for Historians 23; Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 1995).
Reydellet, M., Venance Fortunat, Poèmes, 3 vols. (Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1994-2004).
Further reading:
Brennan, B., "The Career of Venantius Fortunatus," Traditio 41 (1985), 49-78.
George, J., Venantius Fortunatus: A Latin Poet in Merovingian Gaul (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992).
Roberts, M., The Humblest Sparrow: The Poetry of Venantius Fortunatus (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2009).
Roberts, M., "Venantius Fortunatus and Gregory of Tours: Poetry and Patronage," in: A.C. Murray (ed.), A Companion to Gregory of Tours (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2015), 35-59.