Grimaldo de San Millán (Latin: Grimaldus Aemilianensis) or Grimaldo de Silos (Grimaldus Exiliensis) was a Benedictine monk and hagiographer active in the decades on either side of 1100.
[1] He wrote at the request of his abbot, Fortunio, Dominic's successor.
In 1109–1110, the abbot of San Millán, Blas,[b] asked Grimaldo to write an account of the translation and of some miracles attributed to the saint.
The resulting Translatio et miracula sancti Felicis presbyteri recounts eight miracles, seven that took place at San Millán and one at Bilibio.
[5] The Translatio and the Miracula are two separate works in the Bibliotheca Hagiographica Latina (nos.