Godfrey of Cambrai
Template:Use dmy dates Godfrey of Cambrai (also known as Godfrey of Winchester) was the prior of Winchester Abbey from 1082 until his death in 1107. When he joined the Benedictine community around 1070 he was probably around 15 years old. He also was a composer of poems, writing ecclesiastics and eulogies of English kings, and a book of moral epigrams in the style of Martial. Godfrey's genuine works were later often confused with those of Martial's.
His work enjoyed considerable popularity in the century after his death and beyond. One of his poems is included in Carmina Burana.[1] Twenty-one manuscripts of his works survive.
He was popular, under his own name and erroneously under Martial's, during the Italian Renaissance.
References
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- Thomson, Rodney M., 'England and the Twelfth Century Renaissance', Past and Present 101 (1983)
- Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
- Pages with script errors
- 11th-century births
- 1107 deaths
- 11th-century English clergy
- 12th-century English Roman Catholic priests
- Priors
- Year of birth unknown
- English satirists
- Epigrammatists
- Medieval Latin-language poets
- English male poets
- 12th-century English poets
- 12th-century English writers
- 11th-century English poets
- 11th-century English writers
- 11th-century writers in Latin
- 12th-century writers in Latin