Amolo
AMOLO, am´ō-lō: Archbishop of Lyons, 841-852. He was educated in the school of Lyons
under Agobard, whom he succeeded in the archbishopric, and whom he resembled in his freedom
from credulity and superstition. In a letter to
Theotbold, bishop of Langres, dealing with a case
of the exhibition of unauthorized relics by two men
who came from Italy and pretended to be monks,
he advised that they should be prohibited, citing
other cases in his experience which had been mere
fraud and avarice. Amolo also followed Agobard
in his protest against the powerful position which
the Jews were acquiring in the south of France.
His book Adversus Judæos, dedicated to Charles
the Bald, contains some interesting details as to
the Messianic expectations of the Jews at the beginning of the Middle Ages. In a letter to Gottschalk,
who had sought to find in him a supporter, he
exhorts the imprisoned monk to submit to the judgment of the ecclesiastical authorities, and definitely repudiates several
of his assertions on the subject of predestination. His works are in MPL,
cxvi., and his letters in MGH, Epist., v. (1899) 361 sqq.
(A. Hauck).