博比奥的乔纳斯的选择性记忆

I. Wood
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摘要

书写墨洛温王朝的历史在传统上有点像用垫脚石过河(tritsteine):从一个源头到另一个源头,尽可能地走一条直线。很少有人能奢侈地选择另一条路线。六世纪的石头是图尔的格列高利。第七卷的前半部分是弗雷德加,尽管在他自己的独立作品中,也就是所谓的第四卷中,他融合了早期的材料,包括维埃纳的《德西留斯的一生》和约纳斯的《维塔·科伦巴尼》。当然,我们都知道这不是一种非常安全的方式。尤其是格列高利的叙述,近年来受到了挑战仔细研究图尔主教自己的行为方式,以及其他来源,尤其是维南提乌斯·福图纳图斯的诗歌,以及法律法规,教会教义和一些圣徒传记,我们有时可以添加考古证据,使我们能够更好地了解格列高利对他的材料做了什么。我们知道他对过去的看法是有选择性的,他对事件的精心组织的陈述是为了提供一种特殊的解释——一种主导了后来所有阅读的解释。我们对弗雷德加的目的的理解远没有进步,而且他似乎仍然主要被用作信息宝库博比奥的乔纳斯为弗雷德加提供了一个特别著名的章节3,他的意图可能更容易理解。然而,因为在我们阅读乔纳斯的时候,几乎没有什么可以作为控制的东西,所以我们仍然倾向于只看他的叙述的表面价值——尽管至少有两个场合我们可以确定他是在误导我们。在接下来的内容中,我想对乔纳斯提出质疑,并提出他对过去的描述有非常深思熟虑的目的,需要与特定的情况联系起来。当然,其他人也对乔纳斯的圣徒传记提出了质疑,尤其是近年来,但他们的主要焦点是哥伦比亚精神的问题,而不是表现和歪曲的问题。为了做到这一点,我不仅要讲《维塔·科伦巴尼》,还要讲《吠陀的生活》和
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Selective Memory of Jonas of Bobbio
Writing Merovingian history has traditionally been a little like crossing a river using stepping stones (Trittsteine): one moves from one source to the next in as straight a line as one can manage. Rarely is one offered the luxury of an alternative route. The sixth-century stone is Gregory of Tours. For the first half of the seventh we have Fredegar, although even in his own independent composition, the so-called Book IV, he incorporates earlier material, including a Life of Desiderius of Vienne and Jonas’s Vita Columbani.Of course,we all know that this is not a very safe way of proceeding. Gregory’s narrative, in particular, has been challenged in recent years.1 Careful scrutiny of the bishop of Tours’s own modus operandi, alongside other sources, not least the poems of Venantius Fortunatus, as well as the lawcodes, Church canons, and some hagiography, to which on occasion we can add archaeological evidence, has allowed us to come to a greater awareness of what Gregory did with his material. We know that his view of the past was selective, and his carefully structured presentation of events was intended to provide a particular interpretation – one that has dominated all subsequent readings.We have advanced far less in our understanding of Fredegar’s aims, and he still seems to be used predominantly as a repository of information.2 The intentions of Jonas of Bobbio, who supplies Fredegar with one particularly well-known chapter,3 are potentially more accessible. Yet because there is little that can be used as a control when we read Jonas, there is still a tendency to take his narrative at face value – even though there are at least two occasions where we can be sure that he is misleading. In what follows I want to problematise Jonas, and to suggest that his representation of the past has very deliberate aims, which need to be linked to specific circumstances. Others, of course, have also raised questions about Jonas’ hagiography, especially in recent years,4 but their main focus has been on the problem of Columbanian spirituality, rather than on issues of representation and misrepresentation. In order to do so I will take not just the Vita Columbani, but also the Lives of Vedast and
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