After the latter's death in 482, he took the remains to
Naples and founded a
monastery on the site of a 1st-century
Roman villa, the Castellum Lucullanum (on the site of the later
Castel dell'Ovo). In 511 Eugippius wrote to Paschasius and asked his venerated and dear friend, who had great literary skill, to write a biography of St. Severinus from the accounts of the saint which he (Eugippius) had put together in crude and inartistic form. Paschasius, however, replied that the acts and miracles of the saint could not be described better than had been done by Eugippius. While at Naples, Eugippius compiled a 1000-page
anthology of the works of
St. Augustine and was probably involved in the revision of the
Vulgate text of the
Gospels. He also produced other scholarly works of high quality. There is a monastic rule which is ascribed to Eugippius, but it was early superseded by that of St. Benedict. ==References==