Page:A Biographical Dictionary of the Celebrated Women of Every Age and Country (1804).djvu/40

This page has been validated.
26
BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY

History relates no particular actions of this princess; but says she governed with much wisdom and courage.

Landenulph was assassinated by a plot of his own relations, in 993; and his brother Laidulph, who succeeded, was deposed by the emperor Otho III, in 999, for having a hand in the death of his brother.

It is reported, by an old historian in the life of St. Nil, that Aloara put to death a nephew, lest he should wrest the principality from her son; and, that St. Nil then predicted the failure of her posterity.

F.C.


ALPHAIZULI, (MARIA) Poetess of Seville, during the Time the Moors had Possession of Spain.

She was called the Arabian Sappho; and excellent works of her composition are in the library of the Escurial. Many Spanish women, her cotemporaries, particularly in the province of Andalusia, cultivated the Muses with success.

F. C.


ALPIS, or ALPAIS, (DE CUDOT) a pious French Woman, who flourished in the Diocese of Sens, at the End of the Twelfth Century.

This young woman is mentioned in L'Histoire Litteraire de la France, as having, in a sort of vision or ecstacy, an idea of the form of the globe, similar to those of late geographers. She reported, that she saw the whole world as one compact body. The sun appeared larger to her than the earth, which hung like an egg suspended in the middle of the air, and was on all sides surrounded with water. This idea, which perhaps some simple observation first gave rise to in the mind of

Alpis