- Thomas of Cantimpré
Thomas of Cantimpré (1201–
15 May 1272 ) was aRoman Catholic medieval writer, preacher, and theologian.Biography
Thomas was born of noble parentage at
Sint-Pieters-Leeuw nearBrussels , in theDuchy of Brabant in 1201; died15 May 1272 . At the age of five his education began atLiège , where he spent eleven years mastering the difficulties of the trivium andquadrivium . At the age of sixteen he received the habit of theCanons Regular of St. Augustine in theAbbey of Cantimpré , where he was eventually elevated to the priesthood. In 1232 after fifteen years at Cantimpré, during which he was a constant source of edification to his religious brethren, he entered theOrder of St. Dominic at Louvain, also in Brabant. Immediately after his profession in the following year, he was sent toCologne to pursue the higher theological studies of the order, under the tutelage of the illustriousAlbert the Great . From Cologne, where he spent four years, he went toParis , to the Dominican studium of St. James, to perfect himself in the sciences and to prepare for the apostolate of preaching. Returning to Louvain in 1240, he was made professor of philosophy and theology--an office he filled with rare distinction. He achieved equal success in the apostolate of preaching, in recognition of which the title of "Preacher General" was conferred upon him. His missionary activities extended throughout Brabant and into Germany, Belgium, and France.Writings
To his reputation for missionary zeal and eloquence he added the fame of authorship. In all, seven works, treating of
philosophy ,theology andhagiology , are attributed to his pen. His first and most important work is entitled "Opus de natura rerum." In the composition of this great work, which contains twenty books, he spent fifteen years. "Bonum universale de apibus" is anallegory in which, employing the figure of bees, he treats of precepts concerning conduct and of the duties of superiors and subjects. This work, which had a wide vogue among spiritual writers for many centuries, was printed atDeventer (before 1478), at Paris, and three times atDouai (1597, 1605, 1627). His other works treat of hagiology and are as follows: "Vita Christinae virginis mirabilis dictae," "Vita B. Margaritae Iprensis," "Vita Piae Lutgardiâ," "Vita Joannis abbatis primi monasterii Cantimpratensis et ejus Ecclesiae undatoris," "Supplementun ad vitam B. Mariae d'Oignies a B.M. Jacobo de Vitriaco."Jacob van Maerlant's "Van der Naturen Bloeme" is a free translation of "De natura rerum", the
natural history in twenty books by Thomas of Cantimpré.ource
*CathEncy|title=Thomas of Cantimpré|url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/14693c.htm
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