Abstract :
The life of Gildas by an eleventh-century Breton monk mentions his education at ‘Iren’. Though
often taken to mean ‘Ireland’, this is more probably a corruption of ‘Cerin’, the Old Welsh name
of ‘Corinium’ or Cirencester. If so, it implies the survival in sixth-century Britain of traditional
Roman schools.
Gildas, the sixth-century controversialist, is in the twenty-first century as controversial
as ever. Most disagreement comes from his unreliable account of Roman Britain; but
questions on his origins, dates, education and theology still prompt dispute.1 When so
much is uncertain, hard evidence becomes vital. This paper hence discusses one particular
crux, on his schooling. It occurs in an eleventh-century Vita Gildae by an unknown
monk of Rhuys (near Vannes in south Brittany), who, after describing Gildas’s education
by St Illtud at Llantwit Major, in the Vale of Glamorgan, gave this passage:
Now, St Gildas, having tarried for the space of some years under the instruction of
St Hildutus [5 Illtud], and having been excellently taught by him everything that
the divine goodness had entrusted to him, both in secular writings, as far as the
subject demanded, and in divine writings, bade farewell to his pious master and his
venerable fellow-disciples, and proceeded to Iren [Iren perrexit] that, as a diligent
enquirer, he might also ascertain the views of other teachers both in philosophy
and divinity. When, therefore, he had passed through the schools of a great
number of teachers, and, like a most sagacious bee, had collected the juices from
various flowers, he hid himself in the beehive of the Mother Church, so that, in the
suitable time, he might pour forth the mellifluous words of the Gospel to call back
the people to the celestial joys.