Richard of Cirencester
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Richard of Cirencester (Template:Langx; before 1340–1400) was a cleric and minor historian of the Benedictine abbey at Westminster. He was highly famed in the 18th and 19th century as the author of The Description of Britain before it was proved to have been a later forgery in 1846.
LifeEdit
His name (as Circestre) first appears on the chamberlain's list of the monks of that foundation drawn up in the year 1355.Template:Sfn In 1391, he obtained a licence from the abbot to go to Rome and in this the abbot gave his testimony to Richard's perfect and sincere observance of religion for upwards of thirty years.Template:Sfn In 1400 Richard spent nine nights of the infirmary of the abbey, and likely died that January.Template:Sfn
His only known extant work are the four books of the Historial Mirror of the Deeds of the Kings of England (Template:Langx), covering the years from 447 to 1066. The manuscript of this is in the university library at Cambridge and was edited in two volumes for the Rolls Series by John Mayor.Template:Sfn At the conclusion of the fourth book Richard expresses his intention of continuing his narrative from the accession of William I, and incorporating a sketch of the Conqueror's career from his birth. This design he does not, however, appear to have carried into effect.Template:Sfn
The value of the Historial Mirror as a contribution to our historical knowledge is but slight, for it is mainly a compilation from other writers and even in transcribing these the compiler is guilty of great carelessness. He gives, however, numerous charters relating to Westminster Abbey and also a very complete account of the saints whose tombs were in the abbey church, especially concerning Edward the Confessor. The work was, however, largely used by historians and antiquaries until, with the rise of a more critical spirit, its value became more accurately estimated. Besides the Historial Mirror Richard also wrote, according to a 1396 letter from William of Woodford to Archbishop Thomas of Canterbury,Template:Sfn a treatise on the offices ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) and there was formerly in the cathedral library at Peterborough another tract ascribed to him entitled Super Symbolum. Of neither of these works, however, does any known copy now exist.Template:Sfn
Richard of WestminsterEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Richard is best known for the historical forgery perpetrated by Charles Bertram known as The Description of Britain (Template:Langx). Bertram's original manuscript ascribed this to "Richard the Westminsterian monk" ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), but a British academic looking to verify its authenticity discovered that Richard of Cirencester had been at Westminster around the time of the work's supposed composition. It was then published under a variant of his name ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}})Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and the conflation was universally accepted, to the point where Richard's name is more associated with the discredited forgery than with his own works.Template:Sfn
BibliographyEdit
- Speculum Historiale de Gestis regum AngliæTemplate:Sfn
- Tractatus super Symbolum Majus at Minus
- Liber de Officiis Ecclesiasticis
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
- Template:Citation Template:In lang
- Template:Citation
- Template:Cite ODNB Template:DNBfirst
- Template:Citation – Volumes I & II
- Template:Citation. Template:In lang
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