February 11, 2009 9:31 PM
- Text
Isidore Patron Saint Of Internet?
(CBS)
Pope John Paul is considering naming St. Isidore of Seville the patron saint of Internet users and computer programmers, Vatican sources said on Tuesday.
Saint Isidore was nominated two years ago but the Holy See has yet to make a final decision.
Saint Isidore, who lived in the seventh century, was believed to have written the world's first encyclopaedia, the Etymologies, which included entries on medicine, mathematics, history and theology.
Scholars during the Dark and Middle Ages relied on the Etymologies more than any other textbook. It preserved many fragments of classical learning which otherwise would have been lost, according to The Catholic Encyclopedia.
As archbishop of Seville, Isidore presided over the 4th Council of Toledo, which decreed toleration of Jews.
The Vatican first went online in 1996 with its Web site to publish thousands of Catholic Church documents and Papal speeches.
The site is powered by three host computers named after archangels Raphael, Michael and Gabriel.
The Pope himself moved into cyberspace in 1998 when the world's one billion Roman Catholics were first able to hear and see him recite the Angelus prayers on Sundays and listen to his weekly audience on Wednesdays on the Vatican web page.
©MMI Viacom Internet Services Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Reuters Limited contributed to this report
Saint Isidore was nominated two years ago but the Holy See has yet to make a final decision.
Saint Isidore, who lived in the seventh century, was believed to have written the world's first encyclopaedia, the Etymologies, which included entries on medicine, mathematics, history and theology.
Scholars during the Dark and Middle Ages relied on the Etymologies more than any other textbook. It preserved many fragments of classical learning which otherwise would have been lost, according to The Catholic Encyclopedia.
As archbishop of Seville, Isidore presided over the 4th Council of Toledo, which decreed toleration of Jews.
The Vatican first went online in 1996 with its Web site to publish thousands of Catholic Church documents and Papal speeches.
The site is powered by three host computers named after archangels Raphael, Michael and Gabriel.
The Pope himself moved into cyberspace in 1998 when the world's one billion Roman Catholics were first able to hear and see him recite the Angelus prayers on Sundays and listen to his weekly audience on Wednesdays on the Vatican web page.
©MMI Viacom Internet Services Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Reuters Limited contributed to this report
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