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Moduin Moduin, Modoin, or Mautwin ((ラテン語:Moduinus'', ''Modoinus), c.770–840/3) was a Frankish churchman and Latin poet of the Carolingian Renaissance. He was a close friend of Theodulf of Orléans, a contemporary and courtier of the emperors Charlemagne and Louis the Pious, and a member of the Palatine Academy. In signing his own poems he used the nom de plume ''Naso'' in reference to the ''cognomen'' of Ovid. From 815 (or earlier) until his death he was the Bishop of Autun. ==Ecclesiastical career== Moduin's early career in the church was spent at Saint-Georges in Lyon. He is first recorded in the diocese of Autun in 815, but it is not certain when he was elected or consecrated. He supported Louis the Pious and Charles the Bald during the civil wars of the 830s.〔There is an obscure reference in "Moduin," ''Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature'', John McClintock and James Strong, edd. (New York: Harper), to Charles conquering Aquitaine from Pepin I and then dividing the government of his realm between three capitals: Limoges, Clermont, and Angoulême; the ecclesiastical division of Clermont being given to Moduin.〕 After the deposition of Agobard at the Synod of Thionville in 835, Moduin took over many of the responsibilities of the Archbishop of Lyon. It was during his administration of Lyon that Florus accused him of mistreating the clergy. Moduin may also have been the abbot of Moutiers-Saint-Jean in the Diocese of Langres.
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