Wala abbot of Corbie played a major role in the rebellions against Emperor Louis the Pious especially in 830 for which he was exiled. Radbert defended his beloved abbot known to his monks as Arsenius against accusations of infidelity in an ''epitaph'' (funeral oration) composed as a two-book conversation between himself and other monks of Corbie. Whereas the restrained first book of Radbert''sEpitaphium Arseniiwas written not long after Wala''s death in 836 the polemical second book was added some twenty years later. This outspoken sequel covers the early 830s yet it mostly addresses the political issues of the 850s as well as Radbert''s personal predicament. In Epitaph for an Era an absorbing study of this fascinating text Mayke de Jong examines the context of theEpitaphium''s two booksthe use of hindsight as a rhetorical strategy and the articulation of notions of the public good in the mid-ninth century.
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