Alcuin of York – Lighting up the Dark Ages with a bit of brain training

October 1, 2019

In Anglo Saxon times it seems that Alcuin from York was known throughout Northern Europe. His story started at an early Minster in York where he established a school and a library with a treasure trove of manuscripts. York was soon sacked by the Vikings and then the Normans so the present Minster Library has not retained any of his collection and, frustratingly, we do not have a record of what it comprised. It is highly unlikely though that all would have been lost, documents from this period in other collections across Europe could well have come from Alcuin’s York.

His talents as a lively teacher attracted the attention of Holy Roman Emperor Charlemagne who invited him to Aachen to lead a re – birth of learning that has become known as the ‘Carolingian Renaissance.’ In his retirement at the monastery in Tours he kept in touch by letter with Charlemagne who had become a close friend. His scholarly reputation has come from his writings across a range of disciplines. He also encouraged the monks to use a clearer form of calligraphy – Carolingian miniscule – the basis of our Roman typeface today and he even developed an early version of the question mark symbol. Historians have long researched his important place in history.

However, it is the Mathematicians who credit him with popularising ‘combinatorics’ within the Holy Roman Empire at this time – applying a logical reasoned approach to problem solving with numbers. Alcuin’s experience as a teacher made him determined to get people having some fun whilst they worked through their maths problems. In his ‘Propositions to Sharpen the Young’ from 799 he collected over 50 brain training puzzles to make the subject more palatable. He included stories about dogs chasing hares, families crossing rivers, pigeons sitting on staircases and trick questions too (eg. An ox ploughs a field all day. How many footprints does he leave in the last furrow?) Try the puzzle in the picture above (you may remember it from ‘The Simpsons’) and any others too. Medieval brain training will keep you healthy just like Sudoku! (Google ‘Alcuin of York puzzles’).

Contributed by Louise Fawn – a York and Yorkshire Blue Badge Guide.
Yorkshiresbestguides.co.uk
Britainsbestguides.org.uk

Find a Guide

Recent Posts

A Gander Round Goole

A Gander Round Goole

On the 20th July 1826 a flotilla of boats, decorated with flags and accompanied by brass bands, sailed from Ferrybridge to Goole to mark the opening of the Knottingley to Goole Canal.  On arrival in Goole, at the new docks built by the Aire and Calder Navigation...

Sally, Sally, Pride of our Valley

Sally, Sally, Pride of our Valley

No-one has done more to bring  the Calder Valley to our TV screens than Sally Wainwright OBE. Her brand includes Scott and Bailey, Last Tango in Halifax and Gentleman Jack in addition to the somewhat misnamed Happy Valley, the location for murder, suicide and...

How to experience the Ribblehead Viaduct

How to experience the Ribblehead Viaduct

The key words are “slow” – “imagine” – “listen” Perhaps journey from Ingleton to Hawes along the B6255 – by car, bicycle, motorbike, or coach, and maybe accompanied by a Blue Badge Tourist Guide.  You’ll be travelling along a road that was once an old coaching...

Browse the Member's Directory