Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Robert Bacon and the Early Dominican School at Oxford

View through CrossRef
ROBERT BACON is the first Dominican master at Oxford about whom anything certain is known. Prof. J. C. Russell has collected those details about his life which can be found in chronicle and record sources. To summarize:—Bacon was already a master in 1219, when he was presented to a living at a church in Oxfordshire. He resigned in 1227, probably in order to become a Dominican; he is said to have received the habit from Jordan of Saxony, who was in Oxford in 1229/30. Bacon continued his teaching until his death in 1248. He was a friend of Grosseteste and a friend and schoolfellow of St. Edmund Rich, and he seems to have shared their views on politics. Matthew Paris tells us that Bacon preached an outspoken sermon before the king and certain bishops in 1233, when the barons had refused to meet Henry at Oxford. The king would never have peace, Bacon said, until he removed the bishop of Winchester and Peter des Rievaux from his counsels. Paris couples Bacon with another English Dominican, Richard Fishacre, who died in the same year, in a glowing tribute to the two friars. Both had a great reputation for scholarship, ‘in theologia et in aliis scientiis’, and for preaching: ‘populis gloriose praedicaverunt verbum Domini’. Bacon served on a number of commissions and was active in connexion with the Oxford Jewry. Professor Russell concludes that ‘these tasks show him a man of business ability often entrusted with responsibility’.
Title: Robert Bacon and the Early Dominican School at Oxford
Description:
ROBERT BACON is the first Dominican master at Oxford about whom anything certain is known.
Prof.
J.
C.
Russell has collected those details about his life which can be found in chronicle and record sources.
To summarize:—Bacon was already a master in 1219, when he was presented to a living at a church in Oxfordshire.
He resigned in 1227, probably in order to become a Dominican; he is said to have received the habit from Jordan of Saxony, who was in Oxford in 1229/30.
Bacon continued his teaching until his death in 1248.
He was a friend of Grosseteste and a friend and schoolfellow of St.
Edmund Rich, and he seems to have shared their views on politics.
Matthew Paris tells us that Bacon preached an outspoken sermon before the king and certain bishops in 1233, when the barons had refused to meet Henry at Oxford.
The king would never have peace, Bacon said, until he removed the bishop of Winchester and Peter des Rievaux from his counsels.
Paris couples Bacon with another English Dominican, Richard Fishacre, who died in the same year, in a glowing tribute to the two friars.
Both had a great reputation for scholarship, ‘in theologia et in aliis scientiis’, and for preaching: ‘populis gloriose praedicaverunt verbum Domini’.
Bacon served on a number of commissions and was active in connexion with the Oxford Jewry.
Professor Russell concludes that ‘these tasks show him a man of business ability often entrusted with responsibility’.

Related Results

If I Had Possession over Judgment Day: Augmenting Robert Johnson
If I Had Possession over Judgment Day: Augmenting Robert Johnson
augmentvb [ɔːgˈmɛnt]1. to make or become greater in number, amount, strength, etc.; increase2. Music: to increase (a major or perfect interval) by a semitone (Collins English Dicti...
Wyniki badań 110 dziewcząt “nie uczących się i nie pracujących”
Wyniki badań 110 dziewcząt “nie uczących się i nie pracujących”
The publication presents the findings of an inquiry conducted among 110 girls aged 15 - 17 who had been directed, on the grounds of being “out of school and out of work”, to two on...
Francis Bacon
Francis Bacon
In his early thirties, some years before his works appeared in print, Francis Bacon (b. 1561–d. 1626) famously wrote that “I have taken all knowledge to be my province”—and the mod...
Francis Bacon
Francis Bacon
No one disputes the tremendous importance of Francis Bacon in the context of early modern natural, moral, and legal philosophy, but assessments of that importance in the long term,...
Scientific Knowledge in Bacon Philosophy: Insights from Dialectical Materialism
Scientific Knowledge in Bacon Philosophy: Insights from Dialectical Materialism
Francis Bacon occupies a central position in the history of the philosophy of science, representing a pivotal shift from medieval to early modern scientific thought. Therefore, in...
British Food Journal Volume 42 Issue 9 1940
British Food Journal Volume 42 Issue 9 1940
The curing of pork for the purpose of manufacturing bacon and ham is fundamentally a process of salting that was originally used merely as a method of preservation. A century and a...
Jurisprudence by Aphorisms: Francis Bacon and the “Uses” of Small Forms
Jurisprudence by Aphorisms: Francis Bacon and the “Uses” of Small Forms
The belief that Francis Bacon was, from the start, a stalwart defender of royal absolutism has prevailed in scholarship despite occasional comments about Bacon’s pluralist or colla...
Dominicans and Baseball
Dominicans and Baseball
Baseball reflects the sacrifice, commitment, and determination that Dominicans displayed during foreign occupation (1916–1924; 1965–1966), dictatorship (1930–1961; 1966–1978), and ...

Back to Top