翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Hugh of Austrasia
・ Hugh of Balma
・ Hugh of Beaulieu
・ Hugh of Brechin
・ Hugh of Briel
・ Hugh of Burgundy (disambiguation)
・ Hugh of Chalon
・ Hugh of Chalon (archbishop of Besançon)
・ Hugh of Chalon (bishop of Auxerre)
・ Hugh of Champagne
・ Hugh of Champlitte
・ Hugh of Châteauneuf
・ Hugh of Cluny
・ Hugh of Die
・ Hugh of Digne
Hugh of Evesham
・ Hugh of Farfa
・ Hugh of Flavigny
・ Hugh of Fleury
・ Hugh of Fouilloy
・ Hugh of Ibelin
・ Hugh of Ibelin (died 1238)
・ Hugh of Italy
・ Hugh of Jabala
・ Hugh of Langres
・ Hugh of Lincoln
・ Hugh of Lucca
・ Hugh of Lusignan
・ Hugh of Montgomery, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury
・ Hugh of Newcastle


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Hugh of Evesham : ウィキペディア英語版
Hugh of Evesham
Hugh of Evesham (died 1287) was a 13th-century English churchman, physician and alchemist. Given his name, it is likely that he came from Evesham, Worcestershire. Hugh studied at Oxford University in the 1260s. At some point in his student career he became friends with John Peckham, future Archbishop of Canterbury. According to the manuscript of John Bale's mid-16th century ''Index Britanniae Scriptorum'' 〔Reginald Lane Poole (ed.), ''Anecdota Oxoniensia'' 9 (Oxford 1902), p. 170.〕), he was a Doctor of Medicine and the author of ''Quaestiones'' on Isaac's ''liber febrium.''〔A. Paravicini Bagliani, "A proposito dell' insegnamento di medicina allo studium curiae," ''Studi sul XIV secolo in memoria di Anneliese Maier'' (ed. Alfonso Maierù and Agostino Paravicini Bagliani) (Roma 1981), pp. 400-405.〕 In 1269, Master Hugh of Evesham was one of the professors at Oxford who became drawn into the controversy between the Dominicans and Franciscans.〔A. Little, ''The Grey Friars at Oxford'' (Oxford 1892), Appendix C, pp. 76-77 and 331, 333.〕 By 1275 Master Hugh was Archdeacon of Worcester,〔John Le Neve, ''Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae'' III, p. 74; the appointment was made by Bishop Godfrey Giffard (1268-1302), brother of Archbishop Walter Gifford of York.〕 and on 9 June 1275, Archdeacon Hugh was granted permission by Bishop Gifford to go to "parts beyond the sea" for the purpose of study.〔J. W. Willis Bund (editor), ''Episcopal Registers, Diocese of Worcester. Register of Bishop Godfrey Giffard, September 23rd, 1268 to August 15th, 1301 ''Volume II (Oxford 1902), p. 74.〕 This meant that he went to study in Continental Europe. On 16 September 1275, however, Hugh was still in the Diocese of Worcester, for he received a mandate from the Bishop to proclaim the forthcoming ceremony of purgation of a criminal of his crime.〔''Register of Bishop Godfrey Gifford'' II, p. 85.〕

By the early 1270s he was working as a royal clerk, giving his services to King Edward I of England. By the end of the decade he had gained a wide reputation as a great physician. Hugh gained many benefices in the diocese of York,〔He was Rector of Welton and Hemingbrough in the Diocese of York, appointed by Archbishop Giffard (1266-1279): ''Register of Walter Giffard, Archbishop of York'', pp. 56 and 57.〕 and in 1279 was involved in the election of a successor to Archbishop Walter Gifford. He is the "Magister Hugo de Ewesan", canon of York, who participated in the election of William de Wickwane, Chancellor of York, as Archbishop of York, on June 22, 1279. Chancellor William, who received all the votes except his own, voted for Hugh.〔Jules Gay (editor), ''Registres de Nicolas III'' (Paris 1898), 559; W. H. Bliss (editor), ''Calendar of Papal Registers'' I (London 1893), p. 459; Le Neve ''Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae'' III, p. 103.〕 On December 17, 1279, Master Hugh of Evesham, Canon of York, was one of the examiners of candidates for ordination in the Diocese of York, on appointment of Archbishop Wickwane.〔W. Brown (ed.), ''The Register of William Wickwane, Lord Archbishop of York (1279-1285)'' (Surtees Society 1907), p. 22.〕 Hugh and Archbishop Wickwane preserved their friendship, even after he went to Rome. On September 12, 1280, Archbishop Wickwane named Master Hugh of Evesham, Canon of York, and Stephen Patringtone his proctors at the Papal Curia, and so notified Cardinals Giacomo Savelli and Matteo Rosso Orsini 〔''The Register of William Wickwane'', p. 183.〕 In 1282 he was asked to assist the Archbishop in disputes with the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of Durham.
While at Rome, he probably became a personal physician to Pope Martin IV and was entrusted with finding a cure to an epidemic that was then current in the city of Rome. He seems to have become friends with another English physician at Rome, Cardinal John of Toledo. Hugh became a successful Papal courtier and received a numerous rewards. On 12 April 1281 he was made a Cardinal-Priest with the title of San Lorenzo in Lucina - and his chaplain, Alan de St Edmund, was made Bishop of Caithness after the bishop-elect, Hervey de Dundee, died at Rome while seeking Papal confirmation.〔''Registres de Martin IV'', no. 132, p. 50; Bliss, ''Calendar of Papal Registers'' I, p. 464〕
Cardinal Hugh participated in the conclave of 1–2 April 1285, at Perugia, where he had found refuge after being driven out of Orvieto. In the Conclave Cardinal Giacomo Savelli, Cardinal Deacon of S. Maria in Cosmedin, was elected on the first ballot.〔(Sede Vacante and Conclave of 1-2 April, 1285 (Dr. J. P. Adams). )〕 He took the name Honorius IV. When Honorius IV died on Holy Thursday, 3 April 1287, Cardinal Hugh was one of the thirteen cardinals who participated in the Conclave, which took place in Rome at the papal residence near Santa Sabina on the Aventine Hill.〔Conrad Eubel ''Hierarchia Catholica medii aevi'' I second edition (1913), 10 n. 11.〕 He was the senior cardinal-priest. The Conclave opened in April, but the cardinals had one difficulty after another. The plague broke out in the Conclave, and a number of cardinals died; the rest retreated for a time to their private residences. Six cardinals, the sources say, died in 1287. One of them was Cardinal Hugh. The survivors finally elected a new pope on February 22, 1288, Cardinal Girolamo Masci d' Ascoli, OFM, the Bishop of Palestrina, who took the name Nicholas IV.〔(Sede Vacante and Conclave of 1287--1288 (Dr. J. P. Adams). )〕
Cardinal Hugh had lived at Orvieto, Perugia and Rome during the last years of his life, following the Pope and the Roman Curia, of which he was a leading member. He prepared his Last Will and Testament on November 15, 1286.〔Robert Brentano, ''Two Churches: England and Italy in the Thirteenth Century'' (Princeton 1968), pp. 53-56.〕 At the time of his death, according to his Will, he was also possessed of the parishes of Goxhill and Spofforth.〔Brentano, ''Two Churches'', p. 54.〕 He died on July 27, 1287〔Lorenzo Cardella, ''Memorie de' cardinali della Chiesa Romana santa'' II (Roma: Pagliarini 1793), pp. 22-23. It is alleged in the ''Annales Wigorniae'', H. R. Luard (ed.) ''Annales Monastici'' Vol. IV (London 1869), pp. 493-494, that he was poisoned. The ''Annales Wigorniae'' also give the date of his death, vi kal. Augusti.〕 He was buried in his church at San Lorenzo in Lucina.〔 Hugh composed a number of writings on alchemy and medicine, many of which survive, many of which appear alongside writings by John of Toledo. The two were regarded as a pair, Hugh being nicknamed the "Black Cardinal" and John the "White Cardinal."
==Citations==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Hugh of Evesham」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.