Cassiodorus institutiones pdf


Flavius Magnus Aurelius Cassiodorus Senator, cc

 

Late Roman historian and civil servant in Ostrogoth Italy, Cassiodorus was a critical figure in transmitting Classical knowledge into the Middle Ages.

Cassiodorus biography in the bible Finally, his De anima was written at the end of his public service and represents his leave-taking of the world. In Cassiodorus published a chronicle dedicated to Eutharic, the consul of the year. Although of Syrian ancestry, his family had been for at least three generations one of the most important in Bruttium Southern Italy. Cassowaries Casuariidae.

Flavius Magnus Aurelius Cassiodorus originated from a Roman senatorial family in Scyllacium (Squillace, Calabria), southern Italy, shortly after the fall of the western Roman Empire in   Following his father's footsteps, Cassiodorus entered a career in the civil service of the Ostrogothic kingdom of Italy, beginning as quaestor in at a young age (as a result, some estimate his birth to be earlier, in or even ).  After climbing through the Gothic bureaucracy,Cassiodorus availed himself of the fall of Boethius in to become magister officium, head of the civil service of Theodoric the Great, Ostrogoth king of Italy.

After Theodoric's death in , Cassiodorus stayed on as the head of the bureaucracy for his daughter Amalsontha, regent on behalf of her young son king Athalaric.  After Amalontha's deposition in , Cassiodorus still continued to hold positions in the new administration. During this political period, Cassiodorus wrote several works glorifying the Gothic Italian state, including a chronicle of Italy up to , a history of the Goths (now lost) and a collection of state papers (Variae). 

The advent of the devastating Byzantine-Gothic wars in Italy in , and subsequent disorder, prompted Cassiodorus to retire from public life around , and moved to his family estate in Calabria, and subsequently to Constantinople.  Before leaving, Cassiodorus set up a monastery at Vivarium (location uncertain, prob.

on family estates near Catanzaro, Calabria).

Cassiodorus biography He wrote extensively on historical and political topics, including summations of his edicts when in office. The Institutes is thus a catalogue of the books contained in the library at Vivarium. He is even lavish in his praise of those princes who were killing one another: Amalaswintha, Theodahadus, and Witiges. These letters were designed for use on any occasion where a magistrate was created, needing only the insertion of new names.

Cassiodorus spent a quiet decade in Constantinople, primarily writing ecclesiastical works (he wrote his appendix on the soul, a Church history and commentaries on the Psalms and epistles in this period), before returning to Italy and entering his own monastery in  

In the hopes of preserving what remained of Classical thought in crumbling Italy, Cassiodorus stocked the Vivarium monastery with his own private library, and set his monks at translating, summarizing and copying whatever books they could find from Greek and Latin sources.

To overcome the wariness of the Church towards pagan Classical literature, in his letters and works, notably the Institutiones (c), Cassiodorus promulgated the usefulness of a Classical education, however pagan, as preparatory for the proper study of Christian theology.  In the Institutiones and his follow-up De artibus (c),Cassiodorus outlined a program of education in the 'Seven Liberal Arts', harking back to Capella, pointing to the existing Classical books and sources that probably could and should be read safely.  

It is to Cassiodorus whom is owed the long association between monasteries and books.

His De orthographia (c) was a writing handbook for his monks.  Cassiodorus's example at Vivarium (at least the book-copying bit) was taken up with fervor by the Benedictine monastery of Monte Cassino not long after, and would eventually spread across European monasteries in the 9th C.