Chronicle
of the Abbey of Bury St. Edmunds
Jocelin of
Brakelond (Penguin Classics, 1989)
181 pp. First reading.
Posted
30 October 2005.
I stumbled upon this little volume in a used book store and, as I've an
amateurish interest in mediaeval culture, decided to buy it. Written by
a monk of the Abbey of Bury St Edmunds (in Suffolk, England) in the
12th century, it narrates various happenings in that monastery over a
period of about 30 years.
There is no overriding narrative here. The author - Jocelin of
Brakelond by name - seems to have simply jotted things down when the
fancy took him. Most of what he records pertains to the politics -
internal and external - of the monastery, and with financial matters :
there is one amusing section where he records the fees paid to the
monastery by knights of the district. If I was looking
for spiritual exhortation or insight into monastic piety I
quickly
learned that I should look for it elsewhere.
Though the events of the monastery are not exactly of earth-shattering
importance, the book does give one a fascinating view into mediaeval
life at the time. Jocelin himself is a wise old bird whose observations
of his fellow monks are carefully weighed and perceptive. He does not
shrink from relating the drama and discord surrounding elections within
the monastery. In the background of the community's life we
see
the Kings of England (who on a few occasions come to visit), the life
of the surrounding town, and in the distance the waging of the Third
Crusade.
The most interesting part of the book to me was the account of the fire
at the shrine of St. Edmund, and of the subsequent translation of the
body and examination of the corpse (by then about 300 years old and
still, says Jocelyn, incorrupt). I found it a real delight.
Back to Book Note Index
Back to Books