[515] Traube, O Roma Nobilis; Turner, Wm., op. cit. p. 397.

[516] Baemker in Jahrbuch für Philosophie und Spekulative Theologie, Band VII., p. 346, Bd. VIII., p. 222; Healy, John, op. cit. p. 578.

[517] De Wülf, M., History of Mediæval Philosophy, p. 246.

[518] The Council of Eperny (846 A.D.) speaks of Hospitalia Scottorum, “quae sancti homines illius gentis in hoc regno construxerunt”; Mon. Ger. Leg. I., 390; Warren, F. E., op. cit. p. 15.

[519] Many believe that Eriugena was a layman.

[520] Flood, F. M., Ireland: its Schools and Scholars, pp. 94–95.

[521] Flood, F. M., op. cit. p. 95, where the above is quoted.

[522] Text of Eriugena’s works in Migne, Pat. Lat., Tom. 122, with Preface by Gale and Schulter.

[523] In the Library of the British Museum, Harleian, 2506; Turner, Wm., Art. Irish Teachers in the Carolingian Revival, op. cit. XIII., 256.

[524] Mullinger, J. B., op. cit. p. 171.