Lectionary Calendar
Sunday, December 22nd, 2024
the Fourth Week of Advent
Attention!
For 10¢ a day you can enjoy StudyLight.org ads
free while helping to build churches and support pastors in Uganda.
Click here to learn more!

Bible Encyclopedias
Andreas Agnellus of Ravenna

The Catholic Encyclopedia

Search for…
or
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z
Prev Entry
Andrea Vanni
Next Entry
Andreas Benedict Feilmoser
Resource Toolbox

Historian of that church, b. 805; the date of his death is unknown, but was probably about 846. Though called Abbot, first of St. Mary ad Blachernas, and, later, of St. Bartholomew, he appears to have remained a secular priest, being probably only titular abbot of each abbey. He is best known as the author of the "Liber Pontificalis Eccl. Ravennatis", an account of the occupants of his native see, compiled on the model of the Roman Liber Pontificalis. It begins with St. Apollinaris and ends with Georgius, the forty-eighth archbishop (846). Though the work contains no little unreliable material, it is a unique and rich source of information concerning the buildings, inscriptions, manners, and religious customs of Ravenna in the ninth century. The author shows a strong bias and loses no opportunity of exalting as traditional the independence or "autocephalia" of the church of Ravenna as against the legitimate authority of the Holy See. For his time he is a kind of polemical Gallican. His work bears also traces of personal vanity. In his efforts to be erudite he often falls into unpardonable errors. The diction is barbarous, and the text is faulty and corrupt.

Sources

The work of Agnellus was edited by BACCHINI (1708), and by MURATORI in the second volume of is Scriptores Rerum Italic. (reprinted in P. L., CVI. 459-752). The latest edition is that of HOLDER-EGGER, in Mon. Germ. Hist. Scrip. Langob., 265 sqq. (Hanover, 1878). See EBERT, Geschichte der Litteratur des Mittlealters, etc. (Leipzig, 1880), II, 374; BALZANI, Le Cronache Italiane nel medio evo (Milan, 1900), 93-98. For the peculiar autocephalia claimed by the archbishops of Ravenna (akin to that of Milan and Aquileia) see the note of DUCHESNE in his edition of the Roman Liber Pontificalis (Paris, 1886), I, 348, 349.

Bibliography Information
Obstat, Nihil. Lafort, Remy, Censor. Entry for 'Andreas Agnellus of Ravenna '. The Catholic Encyclopedia. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​tce/​a/andreas-agnellus-of-ravenna-.html. Robert Appleton Company. New York. 1914.
 
adsfree-icon
Ads FreeProfile