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Multicultural York: the Anglo-Saxons (AD400-866)

Alcuin: teacher, scholar and poet

Alcuin was a great Anglo-Saxon scholar and a teacher who made York famous throughout Europe. He was born in 735 and went to school in York at the cathedral school. He stayed on as a teacher and became headmaster in 778.

 

Whilst in York, Alcuin helped build up an important library. It became famous throughoout Europe. Books then were very rare and expensive as everything had to be copied and illustrated by hand.


Alcuin's fame spread. In 781, the Emperor Charlemagne, the most powerful ruler in Europe, invited him to Aachen (now in Germany). Charlemagne had a great interest in scholarship and learning. He was so impressed with Alcuin that he made him the head of his Palace School at Aachen and asked him to teach his two sons. Later Alcuin became the Abbot of a monastery at Tours where he died in 804. While he was there some of the rare books from the library in York were brought to St Martin's abbey in Tours.

 

Alcuin made Anglo-Saxon York even more famous as a centre of learning at a time when the city was becoming an international trade centre. Ships brought cargoes up the River Ouse from all over Europe. Alcuin describes this in his famous poem called 'On the saints of the Church of York', a remarkable description of the city as it was over 1200 years ago.




 
Document icon Learning article provided by: York Archaeological Trust | 

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