- The Life of Saint Audrey
"La Vie Seinte Audree" (English: "The Life of Saint Audrey") is a 4625-line
hagiography detailing the life, death, and miracles of Saint Audrey, an Anglo-Saxon saint fromEly in Britain.The only existing copy of "La Vie Seinte Audree" is contained in a manuscript in the
British Library , Additional 70513, recorded in the early 14th century. However, scholars have proposed a date of composition for the poem itself in the late 12th or early 13th centuries.Authorship
"La Vie Seinte Audree" was recently attributed to the French medieval poet,
Marie de France . The lines in which the author declares her identity are strikingly similar to what one finds elsewhere in the ::"Ici escris mon non Marie":"Pur ce ke sois remembree"::"La Vie Seinte Audree", verses 4624-4625
:"Me numerai pur remembrance":"Marie ai nun, si sui de France"::"Les Fables" by Marie de France, epilogue, verses 3-4
In addition, the source materials for the "Seinte Audree" would have been found in
Ely , which is near Saltry - the location of Marie's Latin sources for her Espurgatoire Seint Patriz. [McCash, June Hall. "Introduction." "The Life of Saint Audrey: A Text by Marie de France." Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, Inc., 2006.]ources
While "La Vie Seinte Audree" is allegedly a translation of a Latin text, the original source material is unknown. Rupert T. Pickens suggests that, in actuality, Marie de France combined three Latin texts to create her "Seinte Audree": the life of Saint Etheldreda, "De secunda translatione", and "Miracula Sancte Etheldrede". [Cited in McCash xiv.]
References
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