- Robert of Auxerre
Robert of Auxerre (c. 1156-1212), French
chronicler , was an inmate of the monastery of St Marien atAuxerre .At the request of
Milo de Trainel (1155-1202), abbot of this house, he wrote a "Chronicon", oruniversal history , which covers the period between the creation of the world and 1211. For the years previous to 1181 this is merely a compilation fromProsper of Aquitaine ,Sigebert of Gembloux and others, but it is an original authority for the period from 1181 to 1211.It is one of the most valuable sources for the
history of France during the reign ofPhilip Augustus , and it also contains information about other European countries, theCrusades and affairs in the East.Auguste Molinier , in fact, describes the author as one of the best historians of theMiddle Ages . Robert was evidently a man of great diligence and of sound judgment. Two continuators took the work down to 1228 and it was extensively used, by later chroniclers. The original manuscript is now at Auxerre.The "Chronicon" was first published by
Nicolas Camuzat (1575-1655) atTroyes in 1608; the best edition is in Band xxvi of the "Monumenta Germaniae historica " "Scriptores", with introduction byA. Holder-Egger .Robert has been identified, but on very questionable grounds, with a certain Robert Abolant, an official of the monastery of St Marien, who died in 1214.
References
*A. Molinier, "Les Sources de l'histoire de France", tomes iii and iv (1903-1904).
*1911
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