Isidore of Seville
c. 560 – 636 · Bishop of Seville
Also known as Isidorus Hispalensis
Feast: 4 April (Catholic)

Archbishop of Seville and last of the Latin Fathers. Encyclopedist whose Etymologiae preserved classical learning for the Middle Ages. Presided at the Fourth Council of Toledo (633).
Isidore wrote the Etymologies — a twenty-book encyclopaedia trying to summarise everything the late ancient world knew, from grammar and medicine to ships and furniture. It became the standard reference book for the entire Middle Ages. Every monastery in Europe had a copy. Modern people propose him as the patron saint of the internet, half-jokingly, because he was the first person to seriously attempt 'all human knowledge in one searchable system.' He also organised the Visigothic church in Spain at a moment when most of the Western empire was illiterate. Without Isidore, the centuries between Gregory the Great and Charlemagne are dramatically darker.
Notable works
- ·Etymologies · 627
Primary sources
- ·Isidore, Etymologiae
- ·Isidore, De Viris Illustribus
- ·Braulio of Saragossa, Renotatio Librorum Isidori

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