Today is the last day on which the sequence Victimae Paschali Laudes is sung at Mass this year, and also the feast day of its long-reputed author, Blessed Notker, known as “Balbulus – the Stammerer” in Latin, who died on this day at the age of about 72, in the year 912.
He was born to a wealthy family around the year 840, near the abbey of Saint Gall in Switzerland, where he was educated from early childhood. This was one of the greatest centers of learning and culture in Europe, and to this day, houses an important collection of manuscripts which includes some of the oldest witnesses to the tradition of Gregorian chant. Notker became a great scholar and musician, while also serving the abbey as librarian and guest master, and was offered the abbacy of several other houses, but refused all such preferments. He is generally believed to be the author of a collection of anecdotes known as the Gesta Caroli Magni, one of the earliest sources of information on the life of Charlemagne, a poetic biography of his abbey’s founder, and a martyrology, inter alia.![]() |
A portrait of Notker in a manuscript of the 10th century; public domain image from Wikimedia Commons. |