The
Chronicle of Aniane is essentially a history of the
Carolingian family, charting its rise from 670 and the
Battle of Lucofao through to the death of the Emperor
Louis the Pious in 840. Ideologically, the chronicle is a pro-Carolingian work. It belongs to a class of works that are continuations of the
Greater Chronicle of the English historian
Bede, a
universal history down to 725. The
Chronicle contains no original material, but it is the only surviving source for some material and "is a unique source for the years during the transition from
Merovingian to Carolingian rule for which otherwise little information is left". For the years 670–812, it draws on the same sources as the
Chronicle of Moissac. These include the original continuation of Bede, called the
Universal Chronicle to 741, and a further continuation down to 818, called the "compiler's text", a text which does not survive independently but was the basis for the
Chronicle of Aniane, the
Chronicle of Moissac and the
Chronicle of Uzès. Among the sources used by the compiler were the
Book of the History of the Franks, the
Annals of Lorsch and a lost source known only as the "southern source". Since the text of the
Chronicle of Moissac for the years 716–770 is missing, the
Chronicle of Aniane is the only source for the "compiler's text", including the lost "southern source", for the years 741–770. For later years down to 818, the
Chronicle of Aniane draws on
Einhard's
Life of Charlemagne. Structurally, the
Chronicle consists of
annals proper, covering all its years, down to folio 37r. This is followed without any break by a series of narrative passages on Louis the Pious,
Benedict of Aniane and
William of Gellone. Compared to the
Chronicle of Moissac, that of Aniane has a more southern focus. It frequently omits local information from
Austrasia and
Neustria and also contains less on foreign matters. It records the foundation of Aniane, the entry into the monastery of a certain Count William in 806 and the transfer of Benedict of Aniane from the monastery to a place closer to
Aachen in 814. It is less accurate than the
Chronicle of Moissac. The
Saxon campaign of 779–780 is transformed into an ahistorical Spanish campaign by the changing of a few key words. It mis-dates Louis the Pious's
siege of Barcelona to 803, while it actually took place in 800–801. It is an independent source for the unusual name of
Pope Leo III's father (Atzuppius) and a unique source for the name of his mother (Elizabeth). ==Editing history==