Hiberno-Scottish mission
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Irish and Scottish missionaries (Iro-Scottish, Hiberno-Scottish) were instrumental in the spread of Christianity in Anglo-Saxon England and the Frankish Empire during the 6th and 7th centuries. The Latin term Scotti refers to the Scotti, the Gaelic cultural group who existed in Ireland and in western Scotland. Thus, the "Scots" missionaries who were so influential in the early Church history of Germany included men from both Ireland and Scotland in the modern sense, but were predominantly Irish.
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[edit] Columba to Columbanus (563-615)
After Saint Ninian, Christianity first spread to Scotland again in 563 with the foundation of Iona by Columcille. Following the foundation of Lindisfarne in 635 by Saint Aidan, Hiberno-Scottish missionaries converted most of Anglo-Saxon England during the following decades; the last pagan Anglo-Saxon king, Penda of Mercia, died in 655.
Columbanus from 590 was active in the Frankish Empire, establishing monasteries throughout what is now France and Switzerland until his death at Bobbio in 615. Other Hiberno-Scottish missionaries active at the time, predominantly in Swabia, were Wendelin, Kilian, Arbogast, Landelin, Trudpert, Fridolin, Pirmin (founded Reichenau abbey), Gallus (Abbey of St. Gall), Korbinian, Emmeram and Rupert.
Examples of Hiberno-Scottish monasteries on the continent include the Scots monastery in Regensburg, Vienna, Erfurt and Würzburg.
[edit] Decline
Hiberno-Scottish activity in Europe declined after the death of Columbanus. Celtic Christianity was re-united with Roman Catholicism after the Synod of Whitby in 664, and from 698 until the reign of Charlemagne in the 770s, the Hiberno-Scottish efforts in the Frankish Empire were continued by the Anglo-Saxon mission.
[edit] High Middle Ages
Irish monks known as Papar are said to have been present in Iceland before its settlement by the Norse in the 9th century.
Among the Irish monks who were active in Central Europe were two particularly important theologians, Marianus Scotus and Johannes Scotus Eriugena.
Legends surrounding Iro-Scottish foundations are recorded in a Middle High German text known as Charlemagne and the Scottish Saints (BL Harley 3971).
[edit] See also
[edit] Literature
- Frank Shaw (ed.), Karl der Große und die Schottischen Heiligen. Nach der Handschrift Harley 3971 der Britischen Bibliothek London, Deutsche Texte des Mittelalters LXXI, Berlin (DDR), 1981.
Categories: Articles to be merged since April 2006 | Articles to be merged since December 2006 | Anglo-Saxon Christianity | History of the Germanic peoples | Christian history | Celtic Christianity | Religion in Ireland | Religion in Scotland | Religion in England | Christianity in France | Religion in Germany | Religion in Belgium | Religion in the Netherlands