Vita S. Aethelwoldi Wulfstan's most famous work,
Vita S. Aethelwoldi (The Life of St. Aethelwold), tells of the life and miracles of St. Aethelwold, Bishop of Winchester. The work is 46 chapters long, elaborately composed using complex sentences and displays a familiarity with many earlier hagiographic writings. The
Vita was written very soon after Aethelwold was
canonized, which took place on 10 September 996. Some scholars believe the Vita was written to coincide with this event. The work contains no statement of authorship, but is undoubtedly the writing of Wulfstan. Not only do later sources such as
William of Malmesbury attribute the work to Wulfstan, the piece bears striking stylistic similarities to Wulfstan's other writings. For example, in Wulfstan's poem
Narratio metrica de S. Swithuno, several phrases and even large sections of text, including two entire chapters from
Vita S. Aethelwoldi, appear. The
Vita was written for the purpose of recording the miraculous powers of St. Aethelwold in order to prove that Aethelwold was a vessel of divinity who could be appealed to through prayer as an intermediary to God. Wulfstan's
Vita follows a format similar to other hagiographic works of the time. The piece appears to have been largely inspired by
Lantfred of Winchester's
Translatio et miracula S. Swithuni, which was completed in about 975. Wulfstan's work uses a similar style of prose to that of
Bede’s
Vita S. Cuthberti, which, like the
Vita S. Aethelwoldi, contains 46 chapters. Some events described in Wulfstan’s
Vita are very similar to events described in
Sulpicius Severus’
Vita S. Martini. It is likely Wulfstan drew heavily on these authors in constructing his
Vita.
Narratio metrica de S. Swithuno Wulfstan's poem
Narratio metrica de S. Swithuno is a hexametrical version of Lantfred of Winchester's
Translatio et miracula S. Swwithuni (c.975). Wulfstan's poem was composed between 992 and 994, but was put into its final form after the composition of
Vita S.
Aethelwoldi in 996, when two chapters of Wulfstan's prose from the
Vita were turned into verse and incorporated into the poem. The poem consists of 3386 lines, making it the longest Anglo-Latin poem surviving today. It is also the most accomplished Anglo-Latin poem in terms of metrical style, illustrating Wulfstan's skill as a poet. The poem describes the elevation of St.
Swithun and is also thought to be the original source of the well-known British
weather lore that if it rains on St. Swithun's Day, 15 July, it will rain for the next 40 days.
Breuiloquium de omnibus sanctis Breuiloquium de omnibus sanctis is a recently discovered poem by Wulfstan. The poem bears Wulfstan's name and is thus very significant to scholars as it provides a firm basis for the analysis of Wulfstan's poetic style and technique, allowing it to be used as a template for the attribution of other works to Wulfstan. The poem is long, consisting of 669
hexameters preceded by a prologue of 20 lines of epanaleptic couplets and ending with an epilogue of 27
hexameters.
Breuiloquium de omnibus sanctis is a metrical version of an anonymous
Carolingian sermon on
All Saints called
Legimus in ecclesiasticis historiis. The sermon was very popular in Wulfstan's time and was widely circulated. Wulfstan's poem begins by describing
Pope Boniface IV’s explanation of the
Pantheon in Rome, and then goes on to list various categories of saints venerated by the Church and commemorated on
All Saints' Day.
De tonorum harmonia De tonorum harmonia, also known as
Breuiloquium super musica, is a lost work by Wulfstan. Little is known about the piece, but the majority of information comes from a 15th-century anonymous commentary entitled
De musica. The author of
De musica makes four references to the work of a figure named ‘Wulstan’, which is likely Wulfstan. The references reveal that
De tonorum harmonia, or
Breuiloquium super musica as it is sometimes called, was concerned with the theory rather than the practice of music. Wulfstan is cited as an authority on musical theory. Although now lost, Wulfstan's
De tonorum harmonia is of unique value in that it is the only known work on music composed by an
Anglo-Saxon.
Other works Wulfstan is known to have written
liturgical materials relating to the Cult of St. Aethelwold. Wulfstan was active in promoting the Cult of St. Aethelwold and as
precentor would have been responsible for providing various prayers, tropes, and hymns needed for the cult's celebrations. He is also thought to have composed various hexametrical rubrics, tropes and sequences within the musical
manuscripts the “
Winchester Tropers”. Many of these works attributed to Wulfstan bear no explicit indication of authorship and attribution depends mainly on stylistic arguments. ==Legacy==