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Dhuoda

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104:, on 22 March 841. William was taken from his parents and put under the care of Charles the Bald when he was fourteen years old. While he was away, Dhouda began to write her handbook for him. Her youngest son was also taken from her, although he was taken by his father Bernard and the Bishop of Uzes in order to keep him safe. During this time, Bernard sent Dhuoda to live in Uzes while he was at court in Aachen. Dhuoda herself mentions very little of him during this time. According to Dhuoda, she spent this time struggling to maintain her husband's authority in their land and on the border of Francia. She fulfilled the administrative and military responsibilities of Frankish Septimania on Louis the Pious' behalf. One scholar has suggested that a daughter was born in 844, as one chronicler reports the marriage of William's sister. 93:, Duke of Toulouse and Charlemagne's cousin, who was later named the patron saint of knights. Bernard was a Count of Barcelona and during their marriage he was advisor to Emperor Louis and protector of the Empress Judith as well as being appointed to the office of chamberlain. There were reports of Judith and Bernard being guilty of adultery, sorcery, and attempted assassination. When Bernard broke his alliance with Charles the Bald, he took control of Toulouse but was later captured and decapitated. 270: 353:
commemoration is written down here or who you command be added. And do not hesitate to recite the Psalms that you choose for the remedy of my soul, so that when my last day and the end of my life come for me, I may be found worthy to be raised up to heaven on the right with those good folk whose actions have been worthy, not on the left with the impious. Return frequently to this little book. Farewell, noble boy, and always be strong in Christ. (Book 11)
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of the Frankish era, but also for the history of education and the standards of education which could be attained by women even within the prescriptive bounds of early medieval society. It contains numerous quotations from and allusions to the Bible, and some references to secular writers, though some of the references are incorrect and the Latin is not overly polished.
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conclusion of the book that the intended audience was that of her oldest son. Some historians also believe that in addition to her son Dhuoda intended to have the extended audience of his peers at court including Charles the Bald. In addition to this she also encouraged William to share what he learned from the handbook with his younger brother when he is older.
116:, which Dhuoda wrote for her elder son, William, between 841 and 843. It is known to have been sent to William in 843. It was a work written when Dhuoda had been separated from both her husband and her two sons, the victim of the conflicting ambitions of Charlemagne's descendants. William had been sent as a hostage to the court of 196:
while she was fearing for the lives of herself and her children. Christian devotion was an important part in the lives of Frankish nobility and was the main theme throughout the handbook. Although the book's title doesn’t contain the name of her son, William, it is made clear in the introduction and
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Dhuoda stresses often the importance of obeying fathers, even above kings. The Frankish society was extremely patriarchal. She says: "Now I must do my best to guide you in how you should fear, love, and be faithful to your lord and father, Bernard, in all things, both when you are with him and when
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is arguably what Dhuoda is most well known for. This hand book consists of seventy-three chapters as well as an introduction, invocation, and prologue. The book is full of practical moral directives aimed to help guide her sons through life. It is an invaluable document both for the general history
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We know that poverty and want are found not only among the least of men but also frequently, for many reasons, among the great, So it is that a rich man too may be in need. Why? Because his soul is wretchedly needy. And then there is the poor man who gathers riches with great ease. Or the rich man
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Having the Liber Manualis provides one of our only looks into what an educated woman from this time would know. Dhuodas handbook showed that she was not only literate but also understood numerical learning. In addition to being a guide for William Dhuoda gave examples of her knowledge on Christian
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Dhuoda's book is the only one known to be written by a woman to survive from the Carolingian period. Her work is important in that it offers insight into the education of women, the raising of children, the order of society, the importance of fathers, and how Christianity impacted the lives of the
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Dhuoda wrote that the Carolingian house's enmity had started over ten years before when the emperor's sons started to rebel against their father's authority. The struggle for power embroiled the nobility with the heirs, including her husband, who held a great amount of power as the ruler of
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Because the recitation of the Psalms has such and so many powers, my son William, I urge and direct that you recite them constantly, for yourself, for your father, for all the living, for those persons who have stood lovingly by you, for all the faithful who are dead, and for those whose
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in 824. The specific date of the wedding is contested. Some believe that it fell on the feast of Saints Peter and Paul, which was the 24th of June, while others believe the date to be the 29th of June. Her husband Bernard was the son of
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Pray for the past, if you have been neglectful, that you may finally forget this; for present evils, that you may always escape them; for the future, that you may beware those evils and that they not continue to pursue you there. (Book
76:, was a significant Carolingian woman and writer from a powerful Austrasian family in Aachen. It has been speculated that her unusual name is an attempt to render the Basque name Toda, and that she may have been daughter of 107:
Although Dhuoda was married to the most prominent Frankish magistrate at the time, she is not mentioned in any contemporary works from that period except her own. What little we know of her life comes from her book, the
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You will find in it a mirror in which you can without hesitation contemplate the health of your soul, so that you may be pleasing not only in this world, but to him who formed you out of dust. (Prologue)
155:. Louis would hold onto authority over the eastern Franks, Charles established himself in the west, and Lothar received territory that cut north to south from the Low Countries to Italy. 345:
who envies the poor man, or the poor man who wishes to become rich, just as an unlettered man wishing to become learned may desire this completely but never accomplish it. (Book 4)
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Among the human race, to attain perfection requires the application of great and constant effort. We must apply to various evils the remedies that are their antidotes. (Book 4)
288:, the 1975 French translator of Dhuoda's work, said that Dhuoda's intellectual background was representative of the education that was offered to women during the reign of 170:
Eventually politics caught up with her family. Her husband, Bernard, was condemned for rebellion and executed in 844. Of her sons, William was killed in 850,
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in order to secure the loyalty of his father; Bernard was taken from her before his baptism and was sent to Aquitaine in order to keep him safe.
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Mayeski, Marie Anne. "Mother's Psalter: Psalms in the Moral Instruction of Dhuoda of Septimania." In
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Old Age in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance : Interdisciplinary Approaches to a Neglected Topic /
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Claussen, M. A. “Fathers of Power and Mothers of Authority: Dhuoda and the Liber Manualis.”
308: 164: 152: 148: 144: 117: 293: 132: 462:. Translated by Carol Neel. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 1991. 319: 285: 691: 378: 304: 257:, and from fragments of a manuscript of the Carolingian epoch, found in the library of 813: 744:, ed. Katharina M. Wilson. Athens, 1984. 1–29. Includes selective translation of the 667:. Regents Studies in Medieval Culture. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1991. 322:
translated the text in French in 1975 and it was available for wider distribution.
163:. Because of this power, Bernard's son, William, was held hostage at the court of 128:
The context of the time was a long period of warfare among the Frankish nobility.
582:. Variorum Collected Studies 974.  Farnham Surrey: Ashgate Publishing, 2011. 496: 151:) fought over the partition of the empire. Eventually they divided Europe at the 289: 136: 708:
Claussen, Martin A. "Fathers of Power and Mothers of Authority: Dhuoda and the
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Stone, Rachel. “Political Culture and the Changing Role of Countesses 750-1050”
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Mabillon, Jacques (ed.). PL 106.109–118. Partial edition, available from
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The Place of the Psalms in the Intellectual Culture of the Middle Ages.
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Mayeski, Marie Anne. "A Troublesome Puppy: Dhuoda of Septimania." In
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Riché, Pierre (ed.), Bernard de Vregille and Claude Mondésert (trs.),
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or Centre for Research on Women at the University of Barcelona, Spain
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The work is known from a manuscript of the seventeenth century in the
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Cambridge Medieval Classics 8. Cambridge, 1998. (English translation)
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texts like the bible as well as her knowledge of the Latin language.
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Other women's voices. Translations of women's writing before 1700
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Liber manualis Dhuodane quem ad filium suum transmisit Wilhelmum
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Book 10 – summary of the work's major points, more on the author
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ed. Nancy van Deusen. State University of New York Press, 1999.
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Handbook for William. A Carolingian woman’s counsel for her son
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Handbook for William: A Carolingian Woman's Counsel for Her Son
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Opera Omnia by Migne Patrologia Latina with analytical indexes
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Stofferahn, Steven A. "The many faces in Dhuoda's mirror: The
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A selection of secondary literature in English and French:
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Sources Chrétiennes 225. Paris, 1975.(French translation)
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is divided by the 1975 editor into the following books
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Magistra. A journal of women's spirituality in history
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It is explained in the welcome page on their site <
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http://gilles.maillet.free.fr/histoire/pdf/dhuoda.pdf
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http://gilles.maillet.free.fr/histoire/pdf/dhuoda.pdf
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Dhuoda's work was not widely studied until 1975 when
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Dhuoda often references works by thinkers including
740:Marchand, James. "The Frankish Mother: Dhuoda." In 231:Book 7 – the deaths of the body and of the spirit 210:Prologue – the author and her reasons for writing 243:Book 11 – the usefulness of reciting the Psalms 100:, was born on 29 November 826, and the second, 697:Claussen, Martin A. "God and Man in Dhuoda’s 225:Book 5 – God's chastisement of those he loves 8: 767:Dhuoda: Ninth Century Mother and Theologian 651:. Paris: Picard, 1887. French translation. 454: 452: 450: 448: 446: 444: 442: 440: 438: 436: 434: 432: 404:The Carolingians A Family Who Forged Europe 775:Lay Intellectuals in the Carolingian World 580:Learning and Culture in Carolingian Europe 535:Marriage and the Family in the Middle Ages 518:Old Age and Women in the Carolingian World 489: 487: 485: 483: 481: 430: 428: 426: 424: 422: 420: 418: 416: 414: 412: 228:Book 6 – the usefulness of the beatitudes 219:Book 3 – social order and secular success 475:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 406:. University of Pennsylvania Press, 1993 362: 273:Street in Barcelona named in her honour 52:writer, as well as Duchess consort of 37:(end of Book 10, beginning of Book 11) 769:. University of Scranton Press, 1995. 653:PDF of reprint available from Gallica 635:Dhuoda. Handbook for her warrior son. 574: 572: 473:The Carolingians and the Written Word 7: 629:) has been edited and translated: 506:. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 398: 396: 394: 392: 390: 388: 386: 840:Writers from the Carolingian Empire 647:Bondurand, Édouard (ed. and tr.). 633:Thiebaux, Marcelle (ed. and tr.). 300:you are apart from him." (Book 3) 64:, a handbook written for her son. 25: 820:Women from the Carolingian Empire 537:, p. 80 (Harper & Row, 1987) 494:Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). 234:Book 8 – how to pray and for whom 124:The context of France at the time 721:Women Writers of the Middle Ages 84:, at the Carolingian capital of 785:and a century of scholarship." 325:Duoda is the name given to the 216:Book 2 – the mystery of Trinity 139:, died in 840. His three sons ( 772:Nelson, Janet L. "Dhuoda." In 728:Dhuoda, duchesse de Septimanie 672:The Writings of Medieval Women 1: 835:Medieval Latin-language poets 642:Dhuoda: Manuel pour mon Fils. 471:McKitterick, Rosamond. 1989. 327:Duoda Women’s Research Centre 237:Book 9 – interpreting numbers 830:9th-century writers in Latin 753:Women: Models of Liberation. 60:. She was the author of the 82:Bernard, Duke of Septimania 856: 789:4.2 (Winter 1998): 89–134. 670:Thiebaux, Marcelle (tr.). 533:Gies, Frances and Joseph. 825:9th-century women writers 714:French Historical Studies 690:10 (1988–91): 49–64. < 659:Documenta Catholica Omnia 564:French Historical Studies 78:Sancho I, Duke of Gascony 735:Dhuoda. La Carolingienne 56:and Countess consort of 755:Sheed & Ward, 1988. 742:Medieval Woman Writers 274: 251:Bibliothèque Nationale 72:Dhuoda, author of the 38: 765:Mayeski, Marie Anne. 737:. Le SĂ©maphore, 1997. 503:Catholic Encyclopedia 377:10 (1988–91): 49–64. 315:, among many others. 272: 98:William of Septimania 32: 682:Cherewatuk, Karen. " 600:on 29 September 2010 369:Cherewatuk, Karen. " 102:Bernard Plantapilosa 716:19 (1996): 785–809. 686:: Duoda’s Manual." 663:Neel, Carol (tr.). 649:Le Manuel de Dhuoda 516:Garver, Valerie L. 373:: Duoda’s Manual." 278:Frankish nobility. 222:Book 4 – moral life 213:Book 1 – loving God 733:Godard, Jocelyne. 723:. Cambridge, 1984. 578:Contreni, John J. 313:Augustine of Hippo 275: 91:William of Gellone 48:AD 824–844) was a 39: 730:. Clairsud, 2003. 726:Durrens, Janine. 705:27 (1990): 43–52. 192:Dhuoda wrote the 96:Their first son, 16:(Redirected from 847: 611: 609: 607: 605: 596:. 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Index

Liber Manualis

Frankish
Septimania
Barcelona
Sancho I, Duke of Gascony
Bernard, Duke of Septimania
Aachen
William of Gellone
William of Septimania
Bernard Plantapilosa
Charles the Bald
Louis the Pious
Charlemagne
Lothair
Louis the German
Charles the Bald
Treaty of Verdun
Septimania
Charles the Bald
Bernard
Bibliothèque Nationale
Paris
Nîmes

Pierre Riché
Charlemagne
Louis the Pious
Alcuin of York
Gregory of Tours

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