The Place of Metrics in Anglo-Saxon Latin
Education: Aldhelm and Bede
Carin Ruff, John Carroll
University
The Anglo-Saxons are well known for having been pioneers in teaching Latin
as a foreign language and in developing materials for elementary Latin
instruction to supplement the grammars they inherited from late antiquity.
The Insular grammar-producing industry centered on explicating Donatus's
Ars minor and Ars maior, the sine quibus non
of early medieval Latin learning. Yet, surprisingly, the earliest treatises
on linguistic subjects to survive from Anglo-Saxon England are not elementary
grammars, but treatises on Latin quantitative versification, Aldhelm's
De metris and De pedum regulis. In the next generation,
Bede produced a De arte metrica that became the model for metrical
instruction for centuries to come. Aldhelm's and Bede's approaches to
explaining versification are as different as their stylistic temperaments.
Their contrasting approaches to explaining versification shed light on
what they expected of student readers, for whom metrics was an integral
part of grammar and thus a model for how to approach complex Latin texts
of all kinds.
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