Flavius Merobaudes
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- For the 4th century Frankish general, see Merobaudes
Flavius Merobaudes (5th century), Latin rhetorician and poet, probably a native of Baetica in Spain.
He was the official laureate of Valentinian III and Aetius. Till the beginning of the 10th century he was known only from the notice of him in the Chronicle (year 443) of his, contemporary Idacius, where he is praised as a poet and orator, and mention is made of statues set up in his honour.
In 1813 the base of a statue was discovered at Rome, with a long inscription belonging to the year 435 (CIL vi. 1724) upon Flavius Merobaudes, celebrating his merits as warrior and poet. Ten years later, Niebuhr discovered some Latin verses on a palimpsest in the monastery of St Gall, the authorship of which was traced to Merobaudes, owing to the great similarity of the language in the prose preface to that of the inscription.
Formerly the only piece known under the name of Merobaudes was a short poem (30 hexameters) De Christo, attributed to him by one manuscript, to Claudian by another; but Ebert is inclined to dispute the claim of Merobaudes to be considered either the author of the De Christo or a Christian.
The Panegyric and minor poems have been edited by BG Niebuhr (1824); by Immanuel Bekker in the Bonn Corpus scriptorum hist. (1836); the De Christo in T Birt's Claudian (1892), where the authorship of Merobaudes is upheld; see also A Ebert, Geschichte der Literatur des Mittelalters im Abendlande (1889).
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.