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・ William Tevie
・ William Thackeray Marriott
・ William Thaddeus Coleman III
・ William Thaddeus Coleman, Jr.
・ William Thalbitzer
・ William Tharp
・ William Tharp Cunningham
・ William Thaw
・ William Thaw II
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・ William the Breton
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・ William the Clerk
William the Clerk of Normandy
・ William the Conqueror
・ William the Conqueror (short story collection)
・ William the Dean
・ William the Detective
・ William the Dictator
・ William the Englishman
・ William the Faience Hippopotamus
・ William the Fourth
・ William the Good (short story collection)
・ William the Great
・ William the Hardy, Lord of Douglas
・ William the Kid
・ William the Lawless
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William the Clerk of Normandy : ウィキペディア英語版
William the Clerk of Normandy
William the Clerk of Normandy ((フランス語:Guillaume le Clerc de Normandie)) (fl. 1210/1211–1227/1238) was a Norman cleric and Old French poet. He is not the same person as the Scoto-Norman poet William the Clerk, who wrote the ''Roman de Fergus'', sometimes wrongly attributed to the Norman.
William was married with a family. Both the ''Catholic Encyclopedia'' and the ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'' (ODB) maintains that he lived for a time in England, but it remains that he did not write in the Anglo-Norman dialect. He was originally from Normandy and his works suggest that he resided in the Diocese of Lichfield in England.
William authored "six religio-didactic works for lay audiences" (ODB). The oldest, dated to 1210 or 1211, and most popular—it survives in twenty manuscripts—is the ''Bestiaire divin'' ("Divine Bestiary"), a work of natural history and theology. It is dated on the basis of a reference to the sad state of the English Church in 1208. It contains many descriptions of animal life. It is dedicated to William's lord, a certain ''Radulphus'', whose name is the object of an etymology given in the epilogue. Radulphus may be Ralph of Maidstone, who was treasurer of Lichfield in 1215. The ''Bestiaire'' was given several printings between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries.
William's also wrote the ''Vie de Tobie'' for one William, prior of Kenilworth in Arden (1214–27), also in the diocese of Lichfield, and ''Les joies de notre Dame'' (or ''nostre Dame''), which survives in only a single manuscript. The legendary ''Vie de Sainte Marie-Madeleine'', a short biography of Mary Magdalene, belongs to an unknown date. The ''Besant de Dieu'', an allegorical poem, William composed in 1226 or 1227. For this William drew on several recent events: the publication of ''De miseria conditionis humanae'' by Pope Innocent III, the Fourth Crusade, the interdict placed on England by Innocent in 1208–13, the Albigensian Crusade, and the Albigensian campaigns of Louis VIII of France. William also comments on the oppression of the peasantry by their rulers. William's last piece, ''Les treis moz de l'evesque de Lincoln'', was written between 1227 and 1238 for Alexander Stavensby, the Bishop of Lichfield.
Several ''fabliaux'' have been erroneously assigned to William: ''Du prestre et d'Alison'', ''La male honte'', and ''La fille à la bourgeoise''. There is no grounds for these ascriptions.
==References==

*Hunt, Tony (2004). "William the Clerk (fl. c.1200–c.1240)." ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''. Oxford: Oxford University Press. (accessed 21 June 2008 )


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