Alpert of Metz
Benedictine chronicler (d. 1024)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alpert of Metz[1] (died 1024) was a Benedictine chronicler of the eleventh century. His De diversitate temporum[2] is a major source for the history of Western Europe (particularly for France, Western Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands) in the period it covers, which is 990 to 1021. It was dedicated to Burchard of Worms.
Alpert wrote other works, including a partial biography of Bishop Dietrich I of Metz.[3]
References
- Hans van Rij, Sapir Abulafia (editors) (1980) Gebeurtenissen van deze tijd; Een fragment over bisschop Diederik I van Metz; De mirakelen van de heilige Walburg in Tiel.