- John of la Rochelle
John of la Rochelle (Jean de La Rochelle, John of Rupella, Johannes de Rupella) was a French
Franciscan theologian.He was born in
La Rochelle (Latin Rupella), towards the end of the twelfth century and seems to have entered the Franciscan Order at an early age. He was a disciple ofAlexander of Hales [ [http://servus.christusrex.org/www1/ofm/fra/FRAtho02.html Franciscan Schools of Thought] ] and was the first Franciscan to receive abachelor's degree of theology from theUniversity of Paris .By 1238, he was a master of theology, with his own pupils, for his name is found in the list of masters convoked in that year byWilliam of Auvergne, Bishop of Paris , to discuss the question of ecclesiastical benefices.John was among those who declared against the general lawfulness of plurality. He appears to have enjoyed a favorable reputation, and is described by
Bernard of Besse as a professor of great fame for holiness and learning, whose writings were both solid and extremely useful.In dissensions which rent the Franciscan order, John was one of the most determined opponents of
Brother Elias , and with Alexander of Hales placed himself at the head of the movement which brought about Elias's downfall in 1239. At the command ofHaymo of Faversham , who succeeded Elias as general, he collaborated with Alexander of Hales,Robert of Bastia ,Richard Rufus of Cornwall , and several others, on an explanation of theRule of St. Francis . The work received the approbation of the chapter (probably definitorial) of the order held atBologna ,Italy in 1242, and subsequently became known as the "Exposition of the Four Masters."The majority of succeeding writers place John of Rupella's death in 1271, but a letter of
Robert Grosseteste ,Bishop of Lincoln , written in Sept. or Oct., 1245, speaks of him as being then already dead: "mortuis fratribus Alexandro de Hales, et Joanne de Rupellis."His best known work is the "Summa de Anima." Father
Fidelis a Fanna says that no work on the same subject is to be found so frequently in manuscripts of the thirteenth and fourteenth century in the manyEurope an libraries he searched.Notes
References
External links
* [http://home.sandiego.edu/~macy/John%20of%20La%20Rochelle.html Guide to Thirteenth Century Theologians] (Gary Macy, University of San Diego)
* [http://www.udenap.org/personnalites/rochelle_jean_de_la.htm Jean de la Rochelle] (Université de Napierville) fr icon
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