These papers came to us after Gabriel's death from his files in the Medieval Institute, from his private office, and from his executor.
Astrik L. Gabriel Papers (ALG), University of Notre Dame Archives (UNDA), Notre Dame, IN 46556
Papers of Astrik L. Gabriel (ALG) dating 1929-2005. The bulk of the material falls between 1948 and 2000. This time span starts with his arrival in the United States and ends a few years prior to his death. There are very few documents from his earlier life because he was forced to flee his native country and left behind almost all his books and papers. All information pertaining to his life in Hungary comes from his correspondences with his colleagues and friends.
The collection contains articles, programs, receipts, postcards, posters, cards, newspaper clippings, lecture notes, research notes, pamphlets, bibliographies, resumes, scrapbooks, books, book reviews, applications, catalogues, certificates, passports, diplomas, recommendations, invitations, prayers, prints, business cards, minutes, nominations, invoices, Federal Express mailing sheets, stationary, telegrams, personal papers from before his life in the United States, and photographs of himself, his friends, his work, or locations of interest to him.
The material concerns Gabriel's role of Editor-in-Chief of the
Most of the documents are in English, although a large number of documents are in Hungarian. Correspondence with his family is in Hungarian. There are also items in Italian, German, French, Spanish, and Latin. Enikö Janko has provided English summaries of the Hungarian documents; in these summaries, the family name appears first followed by the given name. The family correspondence consists mainly of letters exchanged between Astrik L. Gabriel (ALG) and his brother: Ottó Gábriel, also called Cuca, his nephew: Ottó- László Gábriel Junior (Ottó's son), and his sister-in-law Mary, i.e. Maria Tarr or Mariska.
Stephanie Fox listed the folder titles and put the documents into new acid-free folders. She wrote the Scope and Content Note and the Biographical Sketch. Most of the files in the collection came from Gabriel's file cabinets and remain in the order he established. Personal and family documents came from his private office. Enikö Janko put these in chronological order within categories such as Personal Correspondence, Family Correspondence, Postcards.
Astrik Ladislas Gabriel was born 10 December 1907 in Pecs, Hungary. In 1926 he graduated from Szechenyi Real-Gymnasium and entered the Order of Canons Regular of Prémontré (in English known as Premonstratentians, Norbertines, or White Canons). In 1936 Gabriel recieved his Ph.D. from the Royal Pazmany University of Budapest. In 1938 Gabriel founded the French College of Godollo and maintained the head of the school position until 1947. Also during this period he was a Privat Dozent and later professor at the University of Budapest. He fled from Hungary in 1947. During the 1947-1948 academic school year he was a guest professor at the Pontifical Insitute of Mediaeval Studies in Toronto, Canada.
In 1948, Gabriel came to the United States and taught at the University of Notre Dame. During the 1950-1951 academic year, Gabriel was an appointed member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, a position he again held during the 1979-1980 school year. In 1953, Gabriel was naturalized as a citizen of the US. From 1952 until 1975, he served as Director of the Medieval Institute at Notre Dame. Gabriel was a Fulbright Exchange Professor in 1958 at the International University of Luxembourg, in 1962 at the University of Munich, and in 1967 at the University of Paris. During the 1963-1964 academic year Gabriel served as the Charles Chauncey Stillman Professor of Roman Catholic Studies at Harvard University. During the 1960s, he began and directed the Frank M. Folsom Ambrosiana Microfilm and Photographic Collection in the Medieval Institute at Notre Dame. After his retirement in 1973, Gabriel served as professor emeritus at Notre Dame until his death on 16 May 2005.
Throughout his career, Gabriel received many awards and honors. In 1950 he was awarded the title of Officer de l'Ordre des Palmes Académiques by the French government, who also made him a member of the Légion d'Honneur as a Chevalier in 1956 and as an Officier in 1976. In 1956 he was elected a member of the Societé de l'Histoire de France. In 1961, he was named a fellow of the Royal Historical Society, London, and of the Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres, Paris in 1962. He became a fellow of the Mediaeval Academy of America in 1966 and a fellow of the Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Munich, in 1972. Gabriel was made an honorary doctor of the Biblioteca Amborisana in Milan in 1966. In 1969 he was awarded the title of Commendatore nell'Ordine al Merito by the Italian government. Gabriel was named Titular Provost of the Church of St. Michael the Archangel in Hungary in 1982, and also was made an honorary member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 1983. He served as President of the American Catholic Historical Association in 1973 and as President of the International Commission for the History of Universities, a subsidiary of the International Committee of Historical Sciences, from 1974 to 1985. In 1974 Gabriel recieved the gold medal Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice from the Holy See.
He was the only member of the Roman Catholic Church in his time, who was also member of three Academy of Sciences at the same time. Gabriel also had a vast number of publications. His studies focused primarily on the historical origins and development of universities in the middle ages. While at Notre Dame, he founded the series "Texts and Studies in the History of Mediaeval Education" of which he was the Editor-in-chief. He wrote six of the works in this series; the most well-known included:
Short articles in various Hungarian-language papers from America, Canada, or Hungary having to do with:
1. ALG giving speeches and participating in festivals and ceremonies organized by the Catholic Hungarian community in Toronto, giving a course of lectures on Hungarian history and folk-art in Toronto, University of Ottawa, and Chicago; his lectures and interviews about the first Hungarian in Newfoundland, Canada; his treatise in Analecta Praemonstratensia; his speech in front of three thousand Hungarians in Delhi, Southern Ontario; his inaugural prayer at the Hungarian Charity Society's Social Evening; delivering keynote speeches at the Danube Institute's first two-day Congress in Cleveland, Ohio; his speech at the Hungarian cultural event at Windsor about Hungarian art motifs and their philosophical background.
2. News about ALG conducting lecture series at the University of Notre Dame Medieval Institute on the history of the University of Paris and at the University of Montreal on the intellectual life in medieval Paris; various lectures at Indiana University, Bloomington, in Cincinnati at the Hotel Alms, and in New York's Pierpont Morgan Library where he met Howard Goodhart, Fritz Kreisler, and Cardinal Spellman among others; graduation speeches at Nazareth College in Louisville and Mount Mercy College in Pittsburgh.
3. Articles about ALG's appointment as director of the University of Notre Dame's Medieval Institute in 1952 by Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C. (the only Medieval Institute in the country in those days) and his library and manuscript research project at Harvard.
4. Invitations from Etienne Gilson, the French Congressman and historian of philosophy; book exhibition at Notre Dame organized by ALG; his discourse on the Hungarian dean at the University of Paris in the 15th century; ALG's publicity in Rome reflected in several articles in the Osservatore Romano.
5. ALG's new book "English Scholars in Paris"; his Hungarian nuptial ceremony at St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York, wedding Countess Andrássy Erzsébet and Olgyay Aladár, professor at Notre Dame; his one-year research award from the Princeton Institute for Advanced Studies, article run by the New York Times (including a photo of ALG); his acquisition of old Hungarian material, including some rare books dated before the battle of Mohács of 1526.
6. ALG's article appearing in Ecclesia (official magazine of the Vatican); article by ALG on the spirituality of the most important Hungarian Saint, St. Marguerite of Hungary, and about King St. László from 1077; his trip to Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to give invited talks at the university and in front of the local Hungarian Community.