Vitas Patrum EmeritensiumThe Vitas Patrum Emeritensium is an early medieval Latin hagiographical work written by an otherwise unknown Paul, a deacon of Mérida. The work narrates the lives of the five bishops who held the see of Mérida in the second half of the 6th-century and the first half of the 7th-century: Paul, Fidelis, Masona, Innocentius and Renovatius, with particular space being given to the life of Masona.[1] Date of compositionThe date of composition is debated, but is generally thought to have been made in the 7th-century, with the preface and the first three chapters added on in later centuries.[2][3] However, some scholars argue that the work could have been written as late as the 9th-century.[1] First printed in 1633 in Madrid, only half a dozen manuscripts plus some fragments survive.[1] Historical significanceThe Vitas Patrum Emeritensium is a major source for the study of the Visigothic Kingdom of Toledo. It contains many indications about common life in Hispania in the VI and VII centuries: nourishment, education, clothing… It’s also important for our knowledge about the organisation of Catholic and Arian Churches and the path that led to the conversion of the Visigothic people to Catholicism. References
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