Gerard la Pucelle
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Gerard la Pucelle (sometimes Gerard Pucelle;[1] c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 1117 – 13 January 1184) was a peripatetic Anglo-French scholar of canon law, clerk, and Bishop of Coventry.
Life
Gerard was possibly born in England, taught canon lawTemplate:Efn at the University of Paris in the 1150s, when the study of the discipline of the Church was first differentiated from theology, spurred by the collections of church decretals that began with the Decretum Gratiani assembled by a monk at the University of Bologna. Among his surviving texts are glosses on the Decretum manuscripts to be found among the manuscripts of Durham CathedralTemplate:Efn and glosses in the Summa Lipsiensis,Template:Efn in the Summa Parisiensis,Template:Efn and elsewhere. Gerard added to the standard collection from which he taught. Among his pupils were Lucas of Hungary, Ralph Niger, master Richard, a certain Gervase who retired to Durham, and the English scholar Walter Map.[2]
Gerard was a member of Thomas Becket's entourage, his extended familia,[3] and a close friend of John of Salisbury.[4] After Becket went into exile, Gerard taught for a while in Paris before he undertook a mission to the Empire[5] in 1165/66 even though Frederick Barbarossa was under a ban of excommunication.[6] Between 1165 and 1168 he taught at Cologne, and held a prebend at that city.[1] In 1168 Gerard returned to England and took the oath of fealty to Henry II, which Becket had rejected.[7]
From about 1174 Gerard was once again in England, serving as a principal clerk to Becket's successor as Archbishop of Canterbury, Richard of Dover. He was also with Peter of Blois for a time in Rome, where he represented Archbishop Richard before the Curia. In 1179, Gerard attended the Third Lateran Council as the archbishop's representative. From there, he may have returned to Cologne to teach for a bit, but by 1181 Gerard had returned to England.[6]
Perhaps already a canon,Script error: No such module "Unsubst". in January 1183, Gerard was appointed Bishop of Coventry,[8]Template:Efn which made him the vassal of Henry II of England,Template:Efn but he died the following year on 13 January 1184[8] at Coventry. Some suspected that Gerard was poisoned. He was buried in Coventry Cathedral.[6]
Notes
Citations
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- ↑ a b Weigand "Transmontane Decretists" History of Medieval Canon Law pp. 182-183
- ↑ Knowles Monastic Order p. 674 footnote 3
- ↑ Barlow Thomas Becket p. 78
- ↑ Barlow Thomas Becket p. 135
- ↑ Barlow Thomas Becket p. 127
- ↑ a b c Donahue "Pucelle, Gerard (d. 1184)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
- ↑ Barlow Thomas Becket p. 176
- ↑ a b Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 253
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References
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Further reading
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- S. Kuttner and E. Rathbone, "Anglo-Norman canonists of the twelfth century" Traditio 7 1949–51 p. 279–358
- Pennington, Dr. Ken "d.-glosses, appear in a strata of Bolognese glosses composed during the 1180s" Bibliography.
- Weiler, Dr. Bjorn review of Joseph P. Huffman, Family, Commerce and Religion in London and Cologne: Anglo-German Immigrants, c.1000-c.1300 (Cambridge University Press, 1998) and Joseph P. Huffman's response (on-line Template:Webarchive)
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- 12th-century births
- 1184 deaths
- Bishops of Lichfield
- Academic staff of the University of Paris
- 12th-century writers in Latin
- 12th-century English Roman Catholic bishops
- 12th-century English jurists
- 12th-century French Roman Catholic bishops