Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Maps and Figures
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The Celestine monks of France and the rise of ‘Observant’ reform
- Part I The French Celestines in their world
- Part II The world of the French Celestines
- Epilogue and conclusion
- Appendix 1 Lists and map
- Appendix 2 Reductions of foundation Masses (beyond anniversary Masses) at the Celestine monastery of Paris, 1414 and 1436
- Appendix 3 Reduction of foundation Masses (beyond anniversary masses) at the Celestine monastery of Sens, 1414
- Index
Appendix 1 - Lists and map
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Maps and Figures
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The Celestine monks of France and the rise of ‘Observant’ reform
- Part I The French Celestines in their world
- Part II The world of the French Celestines
- Epilogue and conclusion
- Appendix 1 Lists and map
- Appendix 2 Reductions of foundation Masses (beyond anniversary Masses) at the Celestine monastery of Paris, 1414 and 1436
- Appendix 3 Reduction of foundation Masses (beyond anniversary masses) at the Celestine monastery of Sens, 1414
- Index
Summary
French provincial priors from Independence (1380) to 1450
1380 – Pierre Pocquet
1383 – Robert de Bordes
1384 – Pierre Pocquet
1387 – Lambert Rolons
1390 – Pierre Pocquet
1393 – Jacques le Chien
1396 – Pierre Pocquet
1399 – Pierre de Guerot
1402 – Pierre Prudhomme
1405 – Besonce Devaux
1408 – Simon Bonhomme
1411 – Jean Bassand
1414 – Simon Bonhomme
1417 – Jean Bassand
1420 – Besonce Devaux
1423 – Étienne de Coublans
1426 – Jean Bassand
1429 – Simon Trouvé
1432 – Jean Bassand
1435 – Eudes le Roi
1438 – Jean Bassand
1441 – Simon Trouvé
1444 – Nicaise le Roi
1447 – Pierre Castaing
1450 – Simon Trouvé
Source: The information on the French provincial priors is derived from Nicolas Malet’s seventeenth-century history of the congregation (Avignon, BM, MS 1438), Nicolas de la Ville’s prospographical work of the same century (Avignon, BM, MS 1439), 3–75, and an anonymous eighteenth-century antiquarian compilation (Paris, BA, MS 5145, 547).
Note: For provincial priors before 1380, the information is less consistent. See Chapter 2, 88–9.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Celestine Monks of France, c. 1350–1450Observant Reform in an Age of Schism, Council and War, pp. 269 - 272Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2018