Presbyters Uniwersytet Warszawski
ID
ER 1991
Clerics of Bishop Severinus of Cologne (Gaul) accompany him on a regular basis when he visits the tombs of the saints after the morning hymns on Sundays, AD 397. Account of Gregory of Tours, "The Miracles of the Bishop Martin", Tours (Gaul), AD 573/594.
I 4.
 
Beatus autem Severinus Coloniensis civitatis episcopus, vir honestae vitae, et per cuncta laudabilis, dum die dominica loca sancta ex consuetudine post matutinos hymnos cum suis clericis circumiret, illa hora quae beatus obiit, audivit chorum canentium in sublimi.
  
(ed. de Nie 2015: 440)
I 4.
 
Now the blessed bishop Severinus of the city of Cologne, a man of honorable life and praiseworthy in every respect, on that day of the Lord, while he was visiting the tombs of the saints with his clergy as usual after the morning hymns, heard a choir singing on high at the hour of the holy man's death [i.e. Saint Martin's].
 
(trans. de Nie 2015: 441)

Place of event:

Region
  • Gaul
City
  • Cologne

About the source:

Author: Gregory of Tours
Title: The Miracles of the Bishop Martin, De virtutibus beati Martini episcopis
Origin: Tours (Gaul)
Denomination: Catholic/Nicene/Chalcedonian
Bishop Gregory of Tours (Gaul) began to collect the miracles connected to Martin, his predecessor in bishopric, at the very beginning of his episcopacy. Martin`s power is usually revealed at his tomb in Tours, and Gregory owed his high rank among Gallic bishops largely to his position as the custodian of Saint Martin`s sanctuary. Additionally, Gregory presents the recording of Martin`s miraculous activity as fulfilment of a vow; this vow was the result of no fewer than three visions in which he received the divine commandment to do so, and the promise he had made to his mother. Eventually, Gregory composed four books collecting Martin`s miracles. By cross-reference with other works by Gregory, Raymond Van Dam claimed that the first book – which gathers only the miracles that took place before Gregory`s episcopacy – was completed by 576, the second book was finished by 581, and the third by 588; the fourth book seems to continue up until Gregory`s own death in 594 (Van Dam 1993: 142-146, 199).
Recently, Giselle de Nie prepared a new edition of "The Miracles", which is based on the earlier editions by Ruinart, Bordier, and Krusch. She also normalised the spelling and punctuation, and provided a new translation "that stays as close as possible to the author`s train of thought" (de Nie 2015: xxv).
Edition:
Gregory of Tours, Lives and Miracles, ed. and trans. G. de Nie, Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library 39, Cambridge, MA and London 2015, pp. 421-855.
 
Translation:
Gregory of Tours, The Miracles of the Bishop St. Martin, trans. R. Van Dam, in: R. Van Dam, Saints and their Miracles in Late Antique Gaul, Princeton 1993, pp. 199-303.

Categories:

Functions within the Church - Urban presbyter
    Described by a title - Clericus
      Ritual activity - Celebrating feasts
        Ritual activity - Divine office/Liturgy of the hours
          Relation with - Bishop/Monastic superior
            Devotion - Veneration of saints and relics
              Please quote this record referring to its author, database name, number, and, if possible, stable URL: J. Szafranowski, Presbyters in the Late Antique West, ER1991, http://www.presbytersproject.ihuw.pl/index.php?id=6&SourceID=1991