The most influential of the local martyrologies is the martyrology commonly called
Hieronymian, because it is (pseudepigraphically) attributed to
Jerome. It was presumably drawn up in Italy in the second half of the fifth century, and underwent recension in Gaul, probably at
Auxerre, in the late sixth. All known manuscripts of the text spring from this Gallican recension. Setting aside the additions it later received, the chief sources of the
Hieronymian are a general martyrology of the Churches of the East, the local martyrology of the Church of Rome, a general martyrology of Italy, a general martyrology of Africa, and some literary sources, among them
Eusebius.
Victor De Buck ("Acta SS.", Octobris, XII, 185, and elsewhere) identified the relationship of the
Hieronymian Martyrology to the
Syriac Martyrology discovered by Wright. This is of assistance in recognizing the existence of a general martyrology of the East, written in Greek at
Nicomedia, and which served as a source for the
Hieronymian. This document is in poor condition. Proper names are distorted, repeated or misplaced, and in many places the text is so corrupt that it is impossible to understand it. With the exception of a few traces of borrowings from the
Passions of the martyrs, the compilation is in the form of a simple martyrology. There were three manuscript versions: those of Bern, Wolfenbuttel. and Echternach. The latter is thought to be the earliest, based on a copy possibly brought to England by
Augustine of Canterbury in 597, and preserved in a manuscript at the
Abbey of Echternach, founded by the English missionary
Willibrord. The
Martyrologium Hieronymianum Epternacense, now in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris, is thought to have been written in the early eighth century as an Insular version of the "Hieronymianum", compiled from two separate copies. In some instances the feast is misplaced by a day. Also known as the Echternach recension, it was adapted to the English Church, incorporating memorials for Augustine of Canterbury,
Paulinus of York and others. In 1885
De Rossi and
Duchesne published a memoir entitled
Les sources du martyrologe hiéronymien (in ''Mélanges d'archéologie et d'histoire'', V), which became the starting-point of a critical edition of the martyrology, published through their efforts in Vol. II for November of the "Acta SS." in 1894. The medievalist
Henri Quentin and
Bollandist Hippolyte Delehaye collaborated on an annotated edition,
Commentarius Perpetuus in Martyrologium Hieronymianum, (Brussels, in 1931); Quentin supplied the textual commentary and Delehaye the historical. == Historical martyrologies ==