Braulio was born of a noble Hispano-Roman family. His father, Gregory, was Bishop of Osma. His sister and two brothers were all to hold key posts in the Catholic Church.[2] In 610 Braulio took the habit of a monk, and was later to study at Isidore's school in Seville.
Archbishop Isidore faced a rising threat of Gothic barbarism. His strategic thrust was teaching.[3] Braulio was ordained by Isidore in 624, and joined the clergy serving Seville. The next year, Braulio returned to Zaragoza where his brother John was then bishop, and served as his archdeacon.
Upon his brother's death in 631, Braulio succeeded him as bishop. Known for his personal austerity, almsgiving and preaching, he was an advisor and confidant of several Visigoth kings, including Chindasuinth. The king's son Recceswinth was installed as associate king on Braulio's recommendation.[4]
Braulio worked with Isidore to convert the Visigoths from Arianism.[5] He is said to have encouraged Isidore in his encyclopaedic ambitions,[6] and to have had a hand in the revision of his works. Bishop Braulio, to whom Isidore dedicated it and sent it for correction, divided it into its twenty books.[7] Braulio dubbed it Quaecunque fere sciri debentur, "Practically everything that it is necessary to know".[8]
Braulio responded on behalf of all the Iberian clergy to PopeHonorius I's charge that they might have been neglectful of their duties. One headache was Jews who had been baptised, but who had subsequently lapsed. Whether their handling by the Iberian bishops might have been somewhat lax had been among the Rome's concerns.
Towards the end of his life, he lost his eyesight.[4] He was buried in what is now the church of Nuestra Señora del Pilar in Zaragoza.
Braulio was succeeded as bishop of Zaragoza by Taius (Taio), who had been his pupil. He is buried in La Seo Cathedral, Zaragoza, and is the patron saint of Aragon and of the University of Zaragoza.[1][9]
^Farmer, DH. (2011) Oxford Dictionary of Saints. 5th ed. Rev. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK. ISBN978-0-19-959660-7.
^Via his eradicating Arianism and his leading National Councils at Toledo and Seville, Isidore helped to unify the kingdom. Though King Sisebut, who came to the throne in 612, was a close friend of Braulio, and became known for Roman-like administration and intellectual cosmopolitanism, there were also forced Christian conversions and anti-Judaic measures.
^Writers throughout the Middle Ages referred extensively to Etymologiae. Having drawn from many tomes of antiquity, it became so popular that it came to be read in their stead. Some of these stopped being copied, and disappeared.
^Rusche, Philip G. (October 2005). "Isidore's 'Etymologiae' and the Canterbury Aldhelm Scholia". The Journal of English and Germanic Philology. 104 (4): 437–455. JSTOR27712536
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "St. Braulio". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.