Tutilo
was an Irish man who, while visiting the renowned Benedictine Abbey of
St. Gall in present-day Switzerland, delayed his departure – and stayed
his whole life.
Said to have been a large, powerful, handsome and
quick-witted Irishman, Tutilo was also genial in that he was a teacher,
an orator, a poet, an architect, a painter, a sculptor, an accomplished
illuminator, a musician, even a mathematician and astronomer. His
numerous talents and gifts led to his being much in demand and, by
permission of his abbot, he fulfilled many artistic commissions outside
the monastery. One of these was his sculpture of the Blessed Virgin Mary
for the Cathedral at Metz, considered to be a masterpiece.
He
was a member of the abbey at the zenith of its influence throughout all
of Europe. Many of the Gregorian chant manuscripts that survive to this
day, and some of the most authentic, are undoubtedly Tutilo’s own work.
Of
all his many talents, the one Tutilo loved the most was music.
According to tradition, he could play and teach all of the instruments
in the monastery and had a fine musical voice.
King
Charles had a great admiration for the gifted monk and remarked that it
was a great pity for so much talent to be hidden away in a monastery.
But the saint himself shrank from publicity and when obliged to go to
the great cities he strove to avoid notice and compliments. All he
wanted was to use his gifts for the service of God. Though Tutilo was
the epitome of today's "Renaissance man", sanctity was his real crown.
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