Jean Beleth
Jean Beleth (Latin: Joannes Belethus; fl. 1135-1182) was a twelfth-century French liturgist and theologian. He is thought to have been rector in a Paris theological college.[1] That he was possibly of English origin was a hypothesis discussed by John Pits, and supported by Thomas Tanner; but is no longer taken seriously.[2]
Jean Beleth | |
---|---|
Born | 12th century |
Died | 1185 |
Occupation | Writer |
Life
Beleth is recorded at Tiron in 1135, studying at Chartres around that time, probably teaching theology in Paris, and recorded in 1182 at Amiens.
Works
His Summa de Ecclesiasticis Officiis is a manual and now a source for the Christian liturgy of his time; it was later printed (Rationale divinorum officiorum), and has been dated to 1162.[3]
Jean Belet de Vigny
The 19th-century editions of the Encyclopædia Britannica claimed that Jean Belet de Vigny (fl. 14th century) edited many important works including the edition and translation into French of the hagiography known as the Legenda Sanctorum (Golden Legend). Considering that one of the original authors of the hagiography most frequently named is one "Johannes Beleth", it is more likely that the 14th-century first French edition was a translation from a version of the Golden Legend written by Beleth.
References
Citations
- Concise Dictionary of National Biography
- Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, article by Henry Summerson.
- I – Chapitre Xi
Bibliography
- Douteil, Herbert, ed. (1976), Johannis Beleth Summa de ecclesiasticis officiis. (in Latin)
- Butler, Pierce (1899), Legenda Aurea—Légende Dorée—Golden Legend: A Study of Caxton's Golden Legend, Johns Hopkins University.
- Summerson, Henry (2004), "Jean Beleth", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
External links
- Barbara Hartmann (1992). "Jean Beleth". In Bautz, Friedrich Wilhelm (ed.). Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German). Vol. 3. Herzberg: Bautz. cols. 284–285. ISBN 3-88309-035-2.