
Cassiodorus
Flavius Magnus Aurelius Cassiodorus Senator (c. 485 - c. 585), commonly known as Cassiodorus, was a Roman statesman
and great writer, serving in the administration of Theodoric the Great, king of the Ostrogoths. Senator was part of
his surname not his rank.
Life
Cassiodorus was born at Scylletium (Squillace) in southern Italy, of a family that was apparently of Syrian origin.
He began his career as councillor to his father, the governor of Sicily, and made a name for himself while still very
young as learned in the law. During his working life, as quaestor c. 507-511, as a consul in 514, then as magister
officiorum under Theodoric, then under the regency for Theodoric's young successor, Athalaric, Cassiodorus kept copious
records and letterbooks concerning public affairs. At the Gothic court, his literary skill that seems so mannered and
rhetorical to a modern reader was accounted so remarkable that, whenever he was in Ravenna, significant public documents
were often entrusted to him for drafting. His culminating appointment was as praetorian prefect for Italy, effectively
the prime ministership of the Ostrogothic civil government and a high honor to finish any career.
James O'Donnell notes:
"it is almost indisputable that he accepted advancement in 523 as the immediate successor of Boethius,
who was then falling from grace after less than a year as magister officiorum, and who was sent to prison and
later executed. In addition, Boethius' father-in-law (and step-father) Symmachus, by this time a distinguished
elder statesman, followed Boethius to the block within a year. All this was a result of the worsening split between
the ancient senatorial aristocracy centered in Rome and the adherents of Gothic rule at Ravenna. But to read Cassiodorus'
Variae one would never suspect such goings-on."
There is no mention in Cassiodorus' selection of official correspondence of the death of Boethius.
Athalaric died in early 534, and the remainder of Cassiodorus' public career was engulfed by the Byzantine reconquest
and dynastic intrigue among the Ostrogoths. His last letters were drafted in the name of Witigis. Cassiodorus'
successor was appointed from Constantinople.
Around 537-38, he left Italy for Constantinople where he remained almost two decades, concentrating on religious
questions. He noticeably met Junilius, the quaestor of Justinianus. His constantinopolitean journey contributed to
the improvement of his religious knowledge.
He spent his career trying to bridge the cultural divides that were causing fragmentation in the 6th century between
East and West, Greek culture and Latin, Roman and Goth, and Christian people with their Arian ruler. He speaks fondly
in his Institutiones of Dionysius Exiguus, the calculator of the Anno Domini era.
In his retirement he founded the monastery of Vivarium on his family estates on the shores of the Ionian Sea, and his
writings turned to religion. The twin structure of the Vivarium was to permit coenobitic monks and hermits to coexist.
Cassiodorus also established a library where, at the very close of the classical period, he attempted to bring Greek
learning to Latin readers and preserve texts both sacred and secular for future generations. As its unofficial librarian,
Cassiodorus not only collected as many manuscripts as he could, he also wrote treatises aimed at instructing his monks
in the proper uses of reading and methods for copying texts accurately. In the end, however, the library at Vivarium was
dispersed and lost, though it was still active ca. 630, when the monks brought the relics of Saint Agathius from
Constantinople, to whom they dedicated a spring-fed fountain shrine that still exists.