Ekkehard I the Elder

German monk and poet
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Also known as: Ekkehard I of St. Gall, Ekkehart I of St. Gall, Ekkehart I the Elder
Quick Facts
Also called:
Ekkehard I of St. Gall, Ekkehard
Also spelled:
Ekkehart
Born:
c. 910, Toggenburg?, Alemannia [now in Switzerland]
Died:
Jan. 14, 973, Sankt Gallen
Also Known As:
Ekkehard I of St. Gall
Ekkehart I of St. Gall
Ekkehart I the Elder
Notable Works:
“Waltharius”

Ekkehard I the Elder (born c. 910, Toggenburg?, Alemannia [now in Switzerland]—died Jan. 14, 973, Sankt Gallen) was a teacher, monk, hymnist, and poet whom some scholars regard as the author of Waltharius, a celebrated Latin heroic poem based on the life of King Walter of Aquitaine.

Of noble birth, Ekkehard was educated at the Benedictine monastery of Sankt Gallen (St. Gall) in Switzerland, then one of Europe’s greatest centres of learning, at which he later taught.

After being elected dean of the monastery in 957, Ekkehard went to Rome, where he was well received by Pope John XII. He retired to Sankt Gallen and was chosen abbot but declined the position, recommending one Burkard, whom he continually advised. A noted economist, Ekkehard rejuvenated the intellectual and ecclesiastical prestige that had distinguished Sankt Gallen for centuries. Adjacent to the monastery, he founded a hospice for travelers and the sick.

Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) only confirmed photograph of Emily Dickinson. 1978 scan of a Daguerreotype. ca. 1847; in the Amherst College Archives. American poet. See Notes:
Britannica Quiz
Poetry: First Lines

Among his extant hymns are those honouring the Trinity and Saints Columban and John the Baptist. The belief that Ekkehard was also the author of the famous Waltharius epic stems from a statement in the Casus Sancti Galli, a history of Sankt Gallen written in part by Ekkehard IV, that Ekkehard I—while still in abbey school—composed a Vitam Waltharii manu fortis as a school exercise for his master Geraldus. That an individual named Geraldus, or Gerald, dedicated the work to Bishop Erkanbald of Strasbourg is clear; scholars now tend to attribute the entire 1,456-line Waltharius epic to Geraldus. Certain scholars have suggested that the life of Waltharius to which Ekkehard IV refers is in fact a different Waltharius.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.