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Adam of Barking

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Adam of Barking (fl. 1217?), was a Benedictine monk and religious poet who left a number of writings including De Serie Sex Ætatum which runs to 15,000 lines of hexameter. He belonged to the abbey of Sherborne in Dorset.[1]

Adam of Barking is praised by the 16th-century antiquary John Leland for his great erudition, and his promise as a writer both in prose and verse. According to John Bale and John Pitts, Adam was educated at Oxford, and was a model of all the Christian virtues. As old age came on he devoted himself more and more to the study of Scripture and the work of public preaching. For the latter task he seems to have been peculiarly fitted, and his biographers make special mention of his eloquence and zeal in lashing the vices of the people. Bale and Pitts say that he flourished about the year 1217, and this date may be fairly correct, as one of his works was dedicated to John, canon of Salisbury, who is doubtless to be identified with the far-famed John of Salisbury who died in 1180.

Of Adam's writings, which embraced treatises on the Old Testament as well as the New, there were existing at Sherborne in Leland's time: De Naturâ divinâ et humanâ (verse), De Serie Sex Ætatum (verse), Super Quatuor Evangelia (prose). According to Tanner a manuscript of this author is to be found in the library of Clare College, Cambridge. The names of other works of his are enumerated by Pitts.[2]

Notes

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  1. ^ Rigg, A. G. (2004). "Barking, Adam of (fl. c.1176–c.1200), Benedictine monk and religious poet". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  2. ^ Archer, T. A. (1885). "Adam of Barking (fl. 1217?), Benedictine monk belonging to the abbey of Sherborne in Dorset". Dictionary of National Biography Vol. I. Smith, Elder & Co. Retrieved 24 June 2009. The first edition of this text is available at Wikisource: "Adam of Barking" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.

References

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