Alan of Lille was a notable figure in the second half of the twelfth
century as a theologian and as a poet and he has seemed as rich and
individual a writer to modern scholars as he did to his own
contemporaries. This study examines his work as a whole, in an attempt
to set his well-known literary achievement in the context of his
theological writings. He was in many ways a pioneer, an experimenter
with several of the new genres of his day, an innovator both as a
teacher and as an author. He was not an original thinker so much as an
eclectic, drawing on a wide range of the sources available to his
contemporaries. He shows us what might be done by a lively-minded
scholar with the resources of the day, within the schools of late
twelfth-century France, to bring theology alive and make it interesting
and challenging to his readers.